FN Thomson Reuters Web of Knowledge VR 1.0 PT J AU Goyette, KA Farrie, D Freely, J AF Goyette, Kimberly A. Farrie, Danielle Freely, Joshua TI This School's Gone Downhill: Racial Change and Perceived School Quality among Whites SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE education; segregation; race/ethnicity; school quality; racial threat ID RESIDENTIAL SEGREGATION; CONTACT HYPOTHESIS; TELEPHONE SURVEY; PRIVATE SCHOOLS; NEIGHBORHOOD CONTEXT; INTERGROUP CONTACT; LEVEL ANALYSIS; GROUP POSITION; SOCIAL-CONTROL; GROUP THREAT AB Racial segregation in schools and neighborhoods in the United States is stark and persistent. The results of this research provide clues as to why it may be so enduring. We find that as predominantly white schools in the Philadelphia Metropolitan Area experience increases in black representation of up to seven percentage points during a four- to five-year period, white neighborhood residents are more likely to perceive that the quality of their schools has declined, despite the current conditions of the schools and in spite of changes in school characteristics. Our results are more consistent with racial threat theory than contact theory because they suggest that white residents may initially be threatened by racial change and judge declining school quality according to the racial change itself As a consequence, white families may flee these integrating schools and neighborhoods, further contributing to school and neighborhood segregation. C1 [Goyette, Kimberly A.] Temple Univ, Dept Sociol, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA. [Farrie, Danielle] Educ Law Ctr, Newark, NJ 07102 USA. RP Goyette, KA (reprint author), Temple Univ, Dept Sociol, 1115 Polett Walk,Gladfelter Hall,7th Floor, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA EM kgoyette@temple.edu CR Semyonov M, 2009, EUR SOCIOL REV, V25, P693, DOI 10.1093/esr/jcn075 Rocha RR, 2009, POLIT RES QUART, V62, P415, DOI 10.1177/1065912908320931 Goyette Kimberly, 2008, EQUITY EXCELLENCE ED, V41, P114, DOI 10.1080/10665680701774428 Bartell David, 2008, RESTRUCTURING PHILAD Keeter Scott, 2007, SERIOUS IS POLLINGS Wagner U, 2006, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V69, P380 Saporito S, 2006, SOCIOL EDUC, V79, P81 Groves RM, 2006, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V70, P646, DOI 10.1093/poq/nfl033 Keeter S, 2006, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V70, P759, DOI 10.1093/poq/nfl035 Lee Chungmei, 2006, RACIAL TRANSFORMATIO Tropp LR, 2005, PSYCHOL SCI, V16, P951, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2005.01643.x Parker KF, 2005, CRIMINOLOGY, V43, P1111, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2005.00034.x Jacobs D, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P656 Renzulli LA, 2005, SOC PROBL, V52, P398, DOI 10.1525/sp.2005.52.3.398 Curtin R, 2005, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V69, P87, DOI 10.1093/poq/nfi002 Metropolitan Philadelphia Indicators Project, 2005, WE STAND COMM IND ME Marschall MJ, 2004, POLIT BEHAV, V26, P125, DOI 10.1023/B:POBE.0000035960.73204.64 Dixon JC, 2004, SOC SCI QUART, V85, P257, DOI 10.1111/j.0038-4941.2004.08502003.x Howell W, 2004, LEAVING NO CHILD BEHIND: OPTIONS FOR KIDS IN FAILING SCHOOLS, P161 Hulsey Lara, 2004, SPECIAL NUTR PROGRA Behrens A, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P559, DOI 10.1086/378647 Xie Y, 2003, DEMOGRAPHY, V40, P351, DOI 10.2307/3180805 Saporito S, 2003, SOC PROBL, V50, P181, DOI 10.1525/sp.2003.50.2.181 Charles CZ, 2003, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V29, P167, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.29.010202.100002 Grummel John A., 2003, STATE POLIT POLICY Q, V3, P183 Eitle D, 2002, SOC FORCES, V81, P557, DOI 10.1353/sof.2003.0007 Fairlie RW, 2002, DEMOGRAPHY, V39, P655, DOI 10.2307/3180825 Krysan M, 2002, DEMOGRAPHY, V39, P675, DOI 10.2307/3180826 Holme JJ, 2002, HARVARD EDUC REV, V72, P177 Fairlie RW, 2002, REV ECON STAT, V84, P21, DOI 10.1162/003465302317331892 Bratt C, 2002, ACTA SOCIOL, V45, P107 Orfield Myron, 2002, AM METROPOLITICS NEW Reardon Sean, 2002, PRIVATE SCH RACIAL E Cormier David R., 2002, SPLINE REGRESSION MO Emerson MO, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P922, DOI 10.2307/3088879 Moody J, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P679, DOI 10.1086/338954 Quillian L, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P717, DOI 10.1086/338938 Hess FM, 2001, URBAN AFF REV, V37, P249, DOI 10.1177/10780870122185280 Chiricos T, 2001, SOC PROBL, V48, P322, DOI 10.1525/sp.2001.48.3.322 Reardon SF, 2001, SOCIOL EDUC, V74, P79, DOI 10.2307/2673164 Clotfelter Charles T., 2001, J POLICY ANAL MANAG, V20, P99 Ong Paul M., 2001, RELATIONSHIP SCH RE Curtin R, 2000, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V64, P413, DOI 10.1086/318638 Bankston CL, 2000, SOCIOL QUART, V41, P539, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.2000.tb00072.x Reardon SF, 2000, DEMOGRAPHY, V37, P351, DOI 10.2307/2648047 Charles CZ, 2000, SOC PROBL, V47, P379, DOI 10.1525/sp.2000.47.3.03x0297k Ellen IG, 2000, URBAN STUD, V37, P1513, DOI 10.1080/00420980020080241 Oliver JE, 2000, AM J POLIT SCI, V44, P574, DOI 10.2307/2669265 Stein RM, 2000, POLIT RES QUART, V53, P285, DOI 10.2307/449282 Keeter S, 2000, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V64, P125, DOI 10.1086/317759 Crowder K, 2000, SOC SCI RES, V29, P223, DOI 10.1006/ssre.1999.0668 Teske Paul, 2000, CHOOSING SCH CONSUME Wrinkle RD, 1999, AM J POLIT SCI, V43, P1248, DOI 10.2307/2991826 Bobo LD, 1999, J SOC ISSUES, V55, P445, DOI 10.1111/0022-4537.00127 Harris DR, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P461, DOI 10.2307/2657496 Black SE, 1999, Q J ECON, V114, P577, DOI 10.1162/003355399556070 Yun John T., 1999, RESEGREGATION AM SCH Taylor MC, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P512, DOI 10.2307/2657265 Pettigrew TF, 1998, ANNU REV PSYCHOL, V49, P65, DOI 10.1146/annurev.psych.49.1.65 Quillian L, 1996, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P816, DOI 10.1086/230998 Bobo L, 1996, SOC FORCES, V74, P883, DOI 10.2307/2580385 Croninger Robert, 1996, WHO CHOOSES WHO LOSE, P70 HENIG JR, 1995, TEACH COLL REC, V96, P729 FARLEY R, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V100, P750, DOI 10.1086/230580 LEE BA, 1994, DEMOGRAPHY, V31, P249, DOI 10.2307/2061885 GLASER JM, 1994, J POLIT, V56, P21, DOI 10.2307/2132344 SIGELMAN L, 1993, SOC FORCES, V71, P781, DOI 10.2307/2579895 SMOCK PJ, 1991, SOCIOL EDUC, V64, P278, DOI 10.2307/2112708 FOSSETT MA, 1989, SOC SCI QUART, V70, P820 CLARK WAV, 1987, SOC SCI RES, V16, P211, DOI 10.1016/0049-089X(87)90001-9 JACKMAN MR, 1986, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V50, P459, DOI 10.1086/268998 GILES MW, 1986, J CONFLICT RESOLUT, V30, P469, DOI 10.1177/0022002786030003004 Guest Avery, 1985, SOCIOLOGICAL Q, V26, P91 LEE BA, 1983, SOCIOL QUART, V24, P287, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1983.tb00703.x CARLINER G, 1982, J HUM RESOUR, V17, P25, DOI 10.2307/145522 FARLEY R, 1980, SOCIOL EDUC, V53, P123, DOI 10.2307/2112408 FREY WH, 1979, AM SOCIOL REV, V44, P425, DOI 10.2307/2094885 WRIGHT GC, 1977, AM POLIT SCI REV, V71, P497, DOI 10.2307/1978344 CLOTFELTER CT, 1976, J LEGAL STUD, V5, P99, DOI 10.1086/467546 ROBINSON JW, 1976, SOC FORCES, V54, P911, DOI 10.2307/2576183 GILES MW, 1975, SOC SCI QUART, V56, P85 Kelly Sara, 1975, 7220301 URB I FORD WS, 1973, AM J SOCIOL, V78, P1426, DOI 10.1086/225472 KAIN JF, 1970, J AM STAT ASSOC, V65, P532, DOI 10.2307/2284565 Blalock H., 1967, THEORY MINORITY GROU PETTIGREW TF, 1959, J ABNORM SOC PSYCH, V59, P28, DOI 10.1037/h0047133 BLUMER H, 1958, PAC SOCIOL REV, V1, P3 Allport Gordon W., 1958, NATURE PREJUDICE Myrdal Gunnar, 1944, AM DILEMMA NR 89 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD MAY PY 2012 VL 59 IS 2 BP 155 EP 176 DI 10.1525/sp.2012.59.2.155 PG 22 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 932OQ UT WOS:000303300800001 ER PT J AU Adler, G AF Adler, Gary TI An Opening in the Congregational Closet? Boundary-Bridging Culture and Membership Privileges for Gays and Lesbians in Christian Religious Congregations SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE congregation; homosexuality; boundary; cultural model; bridging ID SAME-SEX MARRIAGE; MAINLINE PROTESTANT CLERGY; UNITED-STATES; NATIONAL CONGREGATIONS; HOMOSEXUAL ORDINATION; DIVERSE CONGREGATIONS; POLITICAL ACTIVITY; MORAL BOUNDARIES; SOCIAL-SERVICES; CHURCH CULTURE AB Openness to homosexuality at the congregational level of American religious life has only recently received scholarly attention. This research reports patterns of membership openness to gays and lesbians among American Christian congregations and synthesizes emerging hypotheses to explain such openness. Using data from the second wave of the National Congregations Study (Chaves 2007), multinomial logistic regression models demonstrate evidence for the importance of clergy characteristics, membership demographics, local context, local theological culture, and religious tradition. A boundary-bridging cultural model also conceptualizes how the bridging practices of congregations influence membership openness. Interfaith volunteering and interracial worship express an organizational approach to social boundaries that prioritizes diversity and openness. With a controversial social issue (homosexuality), and a relative lack of local organizational processes to deal with such an issue, boundary-bridging customs may shape the sexuality boundaries of congregations. This research develops knowledge of cultural processes and homosexuality within American religious congregations. C1 Univ Arizona, Dept Sociol, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA. RP Adler, G (reprint author), Univ Arizona, Dept Sociol, Social Sci Bldg,Room 400, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA EM gadler@email.arizona.edu CR Fulton BR, 2011, J SCI STUD RELIG, V50, P617, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-5906.2011.01579.x Sager R, 2011, J SCI STUD RELIG, V50, P201, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-5906.2010.01560.x Scheitle CP, 2011, SOC FORCES, V89, P913 Frenk SM, 2011, SOCIOL RELIG, V72, P78, DOI 10.1093/socrel/srq064 Chaves M, 2011, AMERICAN RELIGION: CONTEMPORARY TRENDS, P1 Kohler U, 2011, STATA J, V11, P420 Human Rights Campaign, 2011, EMPL DAT Gaines NS, 2010, POLIT RES QUART, V63, P553, DOI 10.1177/1065912909333132 Jenkins KE, 2010, J SCI STUD RELIG, V49, P278 Schwadel P, 2010, REV RELIG RES, V51, P366 Edgell P, 2010, SOC PROBL, V57, P175, DOI 10.1525/sp.2010.57.2.175 Whitehead AL, 2010, SOC SCI QUART, V91, P63 Campbell David E., 2010, AM GRACE RELIG DIVID de Vries Kylan Mattias, 2010, SOCIAL SCI Q, V91, P80 Marti G, 2009, J SCI STUD RELIG, V48, P53, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-5906.2009.01429.x McQueeney K, 2009, SOC PROBL, V56, P151, DOI 10.1525/sp.2008.56.1.151 Booth David, 2009, International Journal of Mathematics in Operational Research, V1 Baggett Jerome P., 2009, SENSE FAITHFUL AM CA Royston P, 2009, STATA J, V9, P466 Potts C. Brady, 2009, CIVIC LIFE AM RELIG Ammerman Nancy Tatom, 2009, CIVIC LIFE AM RELIG, P48 Moon Dawnc, 2009, CIVIC LIFE AM RELIG, P123 Djupe Paul A., 2009, POLITICAL INFLUENCE University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) Academic Technology Services Statistical Consulting Group, 2009, MULT IMP US ICE Chaves M, 2008, SOCIOL RELIG, V69, P415 Neiheisel JR, 2008, J SCI STUD RELIG, V47, P427, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-5906.2008.00419.x Campbell DE, 2008, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V72, P399, DOI 10.1093/poq/nfn032 Cadge W, 2008, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V51, P587, DOI 10.1525/sop.2008.51.3.587 Brumbaugh SM, 2008, J MARRIAGE FAM, V70, P345, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2008.00486.x Dougherty KD, 2008, J SCI STUD RELIG, V47, P23, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-5906.2008.00390.x Froese P, 2008, SOCIOL RELIG, V69, P29 Lichterman P, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P83 Feiner Tina, 2008, RELIG RIGHT SHAPED L Gallois Cindy, 2008, J SCI STUD RELIG, V47, P361 Gossett Charles W., 2008, POLITICS POLICY, V36, P4, DOI DOI 10.1111/J.1747-1346.2007.00092.X Neiheisel Jacob R., 2008, POLITY, V40, P411, DOI 10.1057/palgrave.polity.2300095 Carlin JB, 2008, STATA J, V8, P49 Edwards Korie L., 2008, ELUSIVE DREAM POWER Chaves Mark, 2008, NATL CONGREGATIONS S Froese P, 2007, J SCI STUD RELIG, V46, P465 Van Geest F, 2007, REV RELIG RES, V49, P199 Van Geest F, 2007, REV RELIG RES, V48, P401 Cadge W, 2007, REV RELIG RES, V48, P245 Smith M, 2007, SOC LEGAL STUD, V16, P5, DOI 10.1177/0964663907073444 Neiheisel Jacob R., 2007, RELIG INTERESTS COMM, P73 Brewer Paul R., 2007, POLITICS SAME SEX MA, P215 Chaves Mark, 2007, NATL CONGREGATIONS S Djupe PA, 2006, J SCI STUD RELIG, V45, P609, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-5906.2006.00331.x Blasi AJ, 2006, SOC COMPASS, V53, P367, DOI 10.1177/0037768606066847 Koch JR, 2006, REV RELIG RES, V47, P393 Moore LM, 2006, SOC FORCES, V84, P2205, DOI 10.1353/sof.2006.0101 Olson LR, 2006, SOC SCI QUART, V87, P340, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-6237.2006.00384.x Edgell P, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P211 Beyerlein K, 2006, SOC PROBL, V53, P97, DOI 10.1525/sp.2006.53.1.97 Wolkomir Michelle, 2006, BE NOT DECEIVED SACR Abrams Samuel J., 2006, CULTURE WAR MYTH POL Emerson MO, 2006, PEOPLE OF THE DREAM; MULTIRACIAL CONGREGATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES, P1 Long J. S., 2006, REGRESSION MODELS CA Edgell Penny, 2006, RELIG FAMILY CHANGIN Erzen T, 2006, STRAIGHT TO JESUS: SEXUAL AND CHRISTIAN CONVERSIONS IN THE EX-GAY MOVEMENT, P1 Brewer PR, 2005, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V69, P599, DOI 10.1093/poq/nfi052 Barnes SL, 2005, SOC FORCES, V84, P967, DOI 10.1353/sof.2006.0003 Moon D, 2005, THEOR SOC, V34, P551, DOI 10.1007/s11186-005-3951-6 Finke R, 2005, REV RELIG RES, V47, P5, DOI 10.2307/4148278 Burdette AM, 2005, SOCIOL INQ, V75, P177, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2005.00118.x Craig SC, 2005, POLIT RES QUART, V58, P5, DOI 10.2307/3595591 Myers Valerie L., 2005, AFRICAN AM RES PERSP, V11, P116 Lichterman Paul, 2005, ELUSIVE TOGETHERNESS Thumma Scott, 2005, DAY RELIG Ammerman Nancy Tatom, 2005, PILLARS FAITH AM CON McRoberts Omar M., 2005, STREETS GLORY CHURCH Coffin Brent, 2005, TAKING FAITH SERIOUS, P113 Wilde MJ, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P576 Griswold W, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P1411, DOI 10.1086/381773 Chaves M, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P292 Chaves Mark, 2004, CONGREGATIONS AM Moon Dawne, 2004, GOD SEX POLITICS HOM Moulton Benjamin E., 2004, SOCIOL FOCUS, V37, P59 Van Haitsma Martha, 2004, SEXUAL ORG CITY, P309 Royston Patrick, 2004, STATA J, V4, P227 Jenkins KE, 2003, J SCI STUD RELIG, V42, P393, DOI 10.1111/1468-5906.00190 Tsitsos W, 2003, J SCI STUD RELIG, V42, P205, DOI 10.1111/1468-5906.00173 Beyerlein K, 2003, J SCI STUD RELIG, V42, P229, DOI 10.1111/1468-5906.00175 Lewis GB, 2003, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V67, P59, DOI 10.1086/346009 Pellegrini Ann, 2003, LOVE SIN SEXUAL REGU Djupe Paul A., 2003, PROPHETIC PULPIT CLE Djupe PA, 2002, J POLIT, V64, P596 Olson LR, 2002, J SCI STUD RELIG, V41, P153, DOI 10.1111/1468-5906.00107 Herek GM, 2002, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V66, P40, DOI 10.1086/338409 Lamont M, 2002, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V28, P167, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.28.110601.141107 Cadge Wendy, 2002, QUIET HAND GOD FAITH, P265 Reimer S, 2001, J SCI STUD RELIG, V40, P735, DOI 10.1111/0021-8294.00088 Chaves M, 2001, NONPROF VOLUNT SEC Q, V30, P660, DOI 10.1177/0899764001304003 Loftus J, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P762, DOI 10.2307/3088957 Koch JR, 2000, REV RELIG RES, V42, P206, DOI 10.2307/3512530 Steensland B, 2000, SOC FORCES, V79, P291, DOI 10.2307/2675572 Putnam R. D., 2000, BOWLING ALONE COLLAP Smith Christian, 2000, DIVIDED FAITH EVANGE Wood James R., 2000, SPIRIT LEADS EVOLVIN Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies, 2000, REL CONGR MEMB US 20 Chaves M, 1999, J SCI STUD RELIG, V38, P458, DOI 10.2307/1387606 Wellman JK, 1999, REV RELIG RES, V41, P184, DOI 10.2307/3512106 Beuttler FW, 1999, REV RELIG RES, V41, P239, DOI 10.2307/3512109 Dillon Michele, 1999, CATHOLIC IDENTITY BA Becker Penny Edgell, 1999, CONGREGATIONS CONFLI Cohen Cathy J., 1999, BOUNDARIES BLACKNESS Pattillo-McCoy M, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P767, DOI 10.2307/2657500 Petersen LR, 1998, SOCIOL RELIG, V59, P353, DOI 10.2307/3712122 Becker PE, 1998, SOC PROBL, V45, P451, DOI 10.1525/sp.1998.45.4.03x0175s Smith Christian, 1998, AM EVANGELICALISM EM Dimaggio Paul, 1998, SACRED CO ORG ASPECT, P7 Koch Jerome R., 1998, SACRED CO ORG ASPECT, P292 Ammerman Nancy Tatom, 1997, CONGREGATION COMMUNI Ammerman Nancy Tatom, 1997, LIVED RELIG AM HIST, P196 Green John C., 1997, BULLY PULPIT POLITIC Wald KD, 1996, AM J POLIT SCI, V40, P1152, DOI 10.2307/2111746 Lamont M, 1996, POETICS, V24, P31, DOI 10.1016/0304-422X(96)00005-8 Kite ME, 1996, PERS SOC PSYCHOL B, V22, P336, DOI 10.1177/0146167296224002 WOOD JR, 1995, SOCIOL RELIG, V56, P121, DOI 10.2307/3711759 Warner R. Stephen, 1995, SEX LIES SANCTITY RE, V5, P81 WINSHIP C, 1994, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V23, P230, DOI 10.1177/0049124194023002004 FISHER RD, 1994, J APPL SOC PSYCHOL, V24, P614, DOI 10.1111/j.1559-1816.1994.tb00603.x WARNER RS, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1044, DOI 10.1086/230139 Schoenrade Patricia, 1993, RELIG INDIVIDUAL SOC SEWELL WH, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1 COCHRAN JK, 1991, J SCI STUD RELIG, V30, P45, DOI 10.2307/1387148 Hunter James Davison, 1991, CULTURE WARS STRUGGL DAVIES C, 1982, AM J SOCIOL, V87, P1032, DOI 10.1086/227554 Holm Anders, SOCIOLOGICA IN PRESS NR 129 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD MAY PY 2012 VL 59 IS 2 BP 177 EP 206 DI 10.1525/sp.2012.59.2.177 PG 30 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 932OQ UT WOS:000303300800002 ER PT J AU Roth, LM Henley, MM AF Roth, Louise Marie Henley, Megan M. TI Unequal Motherhood: Racial-Ethnic and Socioeconomic Disparities in Cesarean Sections in the United States SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE birth; cesarean section; choice; health disparities; inequality ID HEALTH-CARE; PRENATAL-CARE; STATISTICAL DISCRIMINATION; MATERNAL AGE; PROVIDERS CONTRIBUTE; VAGINAL DELIVERY; SOCIAL DISTANCE; PUBLIC-HEALTH; BIRTH-RATES; LOW-INCOME AB Disparities in cesarean rates in the United States represent an important social problem because cesareans are related to maternal deaths and to the high cost of American health care. There are pervasive racial-ethnic and socioeconomic disparities in maternity care as in health care more generally, yet there has been little scrutiny of how overuse of cesarean deliveries might be linked to these disparities. There are at least two possibilities when it comes to c-sections: black, Hispanic, Native American, and low socioeconomic status (SES) mothers could be less likely to have needed cesareans, leading to more negative outcomes for both mothers and babies, or they could be more likely to have medically unnecessary cesareans, leading to more negative outcomes as a result of the surgery itself This research uses data on all recorded births in the United States in 2006 to analyze differences in the odds of a cesarean delivery by race-ethnicity and SES. The analysis reveals that non-Hispanic black, Hispanic/Latina, and Native American mothers are more likely to have cesarean deliveries than non-Hispanic white or Asian mothers. Also, after accounting for medical indications, increasing education is associated with a decline in odds of a cesarean delivery, especially for non-Hispanic whites. The results suggest that high cesarean rates are an indicator of low-quality maternity care, and that women with racial and socioeconomic advantages use them to avoid medically unnecessary cesarean deliveries rather than to request them. C1 [Roth, Louise Marie; Henley, Megan M.] Univ Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA. RP Roth, LM (reprint author), Univ Arizona, 433 Social Sci Bldg, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA EM lroth@email.arizona.edu CR Hamilton Brady E., 2012, US DEP HLTH HUMAN SE, V80, P1 Sick Brian, 2011, J HEALTHC MANAG, V56, P114 Lundsberg Lisbet S., 2011, OBSTET GYNECOLOGY, V11, P29 California Department of Public Health, 2011, CA PREGN ASS MORT RE Amnesty International, 2010, DEADL DEL MAT HLTH C World Health Organization, 2010, TRENDS MAT MORT 1990 Maserejian NN, 2009, HEALTH SERV RES, V44, P1933, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2009.01022.x Kuklina EV, 2009, OBSTET GYNECOL, V113, P293 Strickland Daniel, 2009, AM J OBSTET GYNECOL, V201, p422e1 Braun V, 2009, AUST FEMINIST STUD, V24, P233, DOI 10.1080/08164640902852449 Centers for Disease Control (CDC), 2009, NAT VIT STAT REP, V57 Plante Lauren A., 2009, INT J FEMINIST APPRO, V2, P140 Gawande Atul, 2009, NEW YORKER 0601 Institute of Medicine, 2009, WEIGHT GAIN PREGN RE Declercq Eugene R., 2009, PARTN PER HLTH C MAY World Health Organization (WHO), 2009, MON EM OBST CAR HDB Ford J, 2008, OBSTET GYNECOL, V112, P1235, DOI 10.1097/AOG.0b013e31818ce092 Aronowitz R, 2008, SOC SCI MED, V67, P1, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.02.017 Lerchl A, 2008, NATURWISSENSCHAFTEN, V95, P161, DOI 10.1007/s00114-007-0305-4 Bankins Kieva A., 2008, AFRICAN AM RES PERSP, V12, P131 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services National Center for Health Statistics, 2008, NAT DET FIL 2004 Park Alice, 2008, TIME MAGAZINE 0417 Tucker MJ, 2007, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V97, P247, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.2005.072975 Kaminisky Lillian M., 2007, AM J OBSTET GYNECOL, V197, p376e1 Gill Rosalind C., 2007, EUROPEAN J WOMENS ST, V14, P59 Rothman Barbara Katz, 2007, LABORING BIRTH TRANS American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), 2007, OBSTET GYNECOL, V110, P1501 Brownlee Susan, 2007, OVERTREATED WHY TOO Heron Melonie P., 2007, US DEP HLTH HUMAN SE, V55, P1 Centers for Disease Control (CDC), 2007, VIT HLTH STAT, V3 Malat J, 2006, HEALTH, V10, P303, DOI 10.1177/1363459306064486 Leeman LM, 2006, ANN FAM MED, V4, P265, DOI 10.1370/afm.537 Ogden CL, 2006, JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC, V295, P1549, DOI 10.1001/jama.295.13.1549 Daniels P, 2006, AM J HEALTH BEHAV, V30, P188 Kreps GL, 2006, AM BEHAV SCI, V49, P760, DOI 10.1177/0002764205283800 Perloff RM, 2006, AM BEHAV SCI, V49, P835, DOI 10.1177/0002764205283804 Wagner M, 2006, BORN IN THE USA: HOW A BROKEN MATERNITY SYSTEM MUST BE FIXED TO PUT MOTHERS AND INFANTS FIRST, P1 Sakala Carol, 2006, LISTENING MOTHERS Joesch Jutta M., 2006, OBSTET GYNECOLOGY, V108, P784 Centers for Disease Control (CDC), 2006, REV NAT CTR HLTH STA Mahoney SF, 2005, BIRTH-ISS PERINAT C, V32, P170, DOI 10.1111/j.0730-7659.2005.00366.x Klein MC, 2005, BIRTH-ISS PERINAT C, V32, P207, DOI 10.1111/j.0730-7659.2005.00371.x Lutfey K, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P1326, DOI 10.1086/428914 Williams DR, 2005, HEALTH AFFAIR, V24, P325, DOI 10.1377/hlthaff.24.2.325 Balsa AI, 2005, HEALTH SERV RES, V40, P227, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2005.00351.x Dressler WW, 2005, ANNU REV ANTHROPOL, V34, P231, DOI 10.1146/annurev.anthro.34.081804.120505 Beckett Katherine, 2005, FEMINIST THEORY, V6, P251, DOI 10.1177/1464700105057363 Moore Mary Lou, 2005, J Perinat Educ, V14, P5, DOI 10.1624/105812405X72276 LaVeist Thomas A., 2005, J URBAN HLTH S3, V82, piii26 Frisbie WP, 2004, DEMOGRAPHY, V41, P773, DOI 10.1353/dem.2004.0030 Burgess DJ, 2004, J GEN INTERN MED, V19, P1154, DOI 10.1111/j.1525-1497.2004.30227.x Schnittker J, 2004, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V67, P217 American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), 1999, OBSTET GYNECOL, V104, P203 Myers Michael J., 2004, S DAK LAW REV, V49, P526 Song Sora, 2004, TIME MAGAZINE 0419 Macinko JA, 2003, MED CARE RES REV, V60, P407, DOI 10.1177/1077558703257169 Rosenberg TJ, 2003, OBSTET GYNECOL, V102, P1022, DOI 10.1016/S0029-7844(03)00878-0 Danel I, 2003, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V93, P631, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.93.4.631 Harris KM, 2003, HEALTH SERV RES, V38, P711, DOI 10.1111/1475-6773.00141 van Ryn M, 2003, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V93, P248, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.93.2.248 Davis-Floyd Robbie E., 2003, BIRTH AM RITE PASSAG LaVeist TA, 2003, INT J HEALTH SERV, V33, P331, DOI 10.2190/TCAC-P90F-ATM5-B5U0 Balsa AI, 2003, J HEALTH ECON, V22, P89, DOI 10.1016/S0167-6296(02)00098-X Flegal KM, 2002, JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC, V288, P1723, DOI 10.1001/jama.288.14.1723 DiGiuseppe David L, 2002, Matern Child Health J, V6, P169, DOI 10.1023/A:1019726112597 Brink Susan, 2002, US NEWS WORLD R 0728 Gemmel David James, 2002, THESIS KENT STATE U Malat J, 2001, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V42, P360, DOI 10.2307/3090184 Potter JE, 2001, BRIT MED J, V323, P1155, DOI 10.1136/bmj.323.7322.1155 Balsa AI, 2001, J HEALTH ECON, V20, P881, DOI 10.1016/S0167-6296(01)00101-1 Ecker JL, 2001, AM J OBSTET GYNECOL, V185, P883, DOI 10.1067/mob.2001.117364 Shi LY, 2001, SOC SCI MED, V53, P519, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(00)00357-9 Mitler LK, 2000, J CLIN EPIDEMIOL, V53, P1030, DOI 10.1016/S0895-4356(00)00221-3 Frank R, 2000, POPUL RES POLICY REV, V19, P459, DOI 10.1023/A:1010656522963 Hopkins K, 2000, SOC SCI MED, V51, P725, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(99)00480-3 Cohen HW, 2000, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V90, P841, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.90.6.841 LaVeist TA, 2000, INT J HEALTH SERV, V30, P217, DOI 10.2190/LKDF-UJQ5-W1KU-GLR1 Aron DC, 2000, MED CARE, V38, P35, DOI 10.1097/00005650-200001000-00005 Dubay L, 1999, J HEALTH ECON, V18, P491, DOI 10.1016/S0167-6296(99)00004-1 Cook CAL, 1999, SOC WORK, V44, P129 Williams DR, 1999, ANN NY ACAD SCI, V896, P173, DOI 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1999.tb08114.x Lippman Abby, 1999, HEALTH RISK SOC, V1, P281, DOI 10.1080/13698579908406317 Dulitzki M, 1998, OBSTET GYNECOL, V92, P935, DOI 10.1016/S0029-7844(98)00335-4 Perkins Barbara Bridgeman, 1998, MED DELIVERY BUSINES Hibbard JH, 1997, HEALTH AFFAIR, V16, P218, DOI 10.1377/hlthaff.16.3.218 Tussing AD, 1997, MED CARE, V35, P172, DOI 10.1097/00005650-199702000-00007 Hummer RA, 1996, SOCIOL QUART, V37, P105, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1996.tb02333.x Porreco RP, 1996, AM J OBSTET GYNECOL, V175, P369, DOI 10.1016/S0002-9378(96)70148-5 Laveist Thomas A., 1996, Ethnicity and Disease, V6, P21 BRAVEMAN P, 1995, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V85, P625, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.85.5.625 HOERGER TJ, 1995, MED CARE, V33, P332, DOI 10.1097/00005650-199504000-00002 BURNS LR, 1995, MED CARE, V33, P365, DOI 10.1097/00005650-199504000-00004 Wallace John M., 1995, HUMBOLDT J SOCIAL RE, V21, P119 Goer Henci, 1995, OBSTET MYTHS VERSUS LAZARUS ES, 1994, MED ANTHROPOL Q, V8, P25, DOI 10.1525/maq.1994.8.1.02a00030 PAPPAS G, 1993, NEW ENGL J MED, V329, P103, DOI 10.1056/NEJM199307083290207 AVED BM, 1993, WESTERN J MED, V158, P493 STAFFORD RS, 1993, AM J OBSTET GYNECOL, V168, P1297 PEIPERT JF, 1993, OBSTET GYNECOL, V81, P200 FEINSTEIN JS, 1993, MILBANK Q, V71, P279, DOI 10.2307/3350401 KEELER EB, 1993, MILBANK Q, V71, P365, DOI 10.2307/3350407 STAFFORD RS, 1991, JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC, V265, P59, DOI 10.1001/jama.265.1.59 LUPTON D, 1991, SOC SCI MED, V33, P559, DOI 10.1016/0277-9536(91)90213-V GOULD JB, 1989, NEW ENGL J MED, V321, P233, DOI 10.1056/NEJM198907273210406 NEWTON ER, 1989, J REPROD MED, V34, P407 Teberg A J, 1989, J Perinatol, V9, P291 PLACEK PJ, 1988, OBSTET GYN CLIN N AM, V15, P607 World Health Organization (WHO), 1985, LANCET, P436, DOI DOI 10.1016/S0140-6736(85)92750-3 HURST M, 1984, SOC SCI MED, V18, P621, DOI 10.1016/0277-9536(84)90290-9 NELSON MK, 1983, SOC PROBL, V30, P284, DOI 10.1525/sp.1983.30.3.03a00050 Rothman Barbara Katz, 1982, LABOR WOMEN POWER BI NR 111 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD MAY PY 2012 VL 59 IS 2 BP 207 EP 227 DI 10.1525/sp.2012.59.2.207 PG 21 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 932OQ UT WOS:000303300800003 ER PT J AU Wildeman, C AF Wildeman, Christopher TI Imprisonment and Infant Mortality SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE mass imprisonment; parental incarceration; infant mortality; health disparities; population health ID UNITED-STATES; MASS INCARCERATION; PATERNAL INCARCERATION; MATERNAL IMPRISONMENT; PARENTAL IMPRISONMENT; INCOME INEQUALITY; FRAGILE FAMILIES; LIFE EXPECTANCY; PRETERM BIRTH; HEALTH AB This article extends research on the consequences of parental incarceration for child well-being, the effects of mass imprisonment on black-white inequalities in child well-being, and the factors shaping black-white inequalities in infant mortality by considering the relationship between imprisonment and infant mortality, using individual- and state-level data from the United States, 1990 through 2003. Results using data from the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS) show that parental incarceration is associated with elevated early infant mortality risk and that partner violence moderates this relationship. Infants of recently incarcerated fathers who are not abusive have twice the mortality risk of other infants, but there is no association if the father was abusive. Results from state-level analyses show a positive association between the imprisonment rate and the total infant mortality rate, black infant mortality rate, and black-white inequality in the infant mortality rate. Assuming a causal effect, results show that had the imprisonment rate remained at its 1990 level, the 2003 infant mortality rate would have been 3.9 percent lower, black-white inequality in the infant mortality rate 8.8 percent lower. Thus, results imply that imprisonment may have health consequences that extend beyond ever-imprisoned men to their social correlates and that these health spillover effects are not limited to infectious disease. C1 Yale Univ, Dept Sociol, New Haven, CT 06520 USA. RP Wildeman, C (reprint author), Yale Univ, Dept Sociol, POB 208265, New Haven, CT 06520 USA EM christopher.wildeman@yale.edu CR Roettger ME, 2011, CRIMINOLOGY, V49, P1109, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2011.00253.x Clarke JG, 2011, JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC, V305, P923, DOI 10.1001/jama.2011.125 Spaulding AC, 2011, AM J EPIDEMIOL, V173, P479, DOI 10.1093/aje/kwq422 Geller A, 2011, DEMOGRAPHY, V48, P25, DOI 10.1007/s13524-010-0009-9 Roettger ME, 2011, ADDICTION, V106, P121, DOI 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2010.03110.x Wildeman Christopher, 2011, CRIMINOLOGY PUBLIC P, V10, P791 Fording Richard C., 2011, DISCIPLINING POOR NE Wildeman Christopher, 2011, WP0919 FRAG FAM CHIL Maguire Kathleen, 2011, SOURCEBOOK CRIMINAL Guetzkow Joshua, 2011, BARS VERSUS BU UNPUB Wildeman C, 2010, SOC FORCES, V89, P285 Patterson EJ, 2010, DEMOGRAPHY, V47, P587, DOI 10.1353/dem.0.0123 Sampson RJ, 2010, DAEDALUS-US, V139, P20, DOI 10.1162/DAED_a_00020 Harris A, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P1753 Wakefield S, 2010, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V36, P387, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.012809.102551 Western Bruce, 2010, FUTURE CHILD, V20, P181 Giordano Peggy C., 2010, LEGACIES CRIME FOLLO Beckfield J, 2009, EPIDEMIOL REV, V31, P152, DOI 10.1093/epirev/mxp002 Goffman A, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P339 Cho RM, 2009, J HUM RESOUR, V44, P772 Foster H, 2009, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V623, P179, DOI 10.1177/0002716208331123 Wildeman C, 2009, DEMOGRAPHY, V46, P265 Johnson RC, 2009, J LAW ECON, V52, P251, DOI 10.1086/597102 Western B, 2009, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V621, P221, DOI 10.1177/0002716208324850 Wilkinson RG, 2009, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V35, P493, DOI 10.1146/annurev-soc-070308-115926 Guetzkow Joshua, 2009, DO PRISONS MAKE US S, P207 Cho RM, 2009, J URBAN ECON, V65, P11, DOI 10.1016/j.jue.2008.09.004 Heron Melonie, 2009, Natl Vital Stat Rep, V57, P1 Wacquant Loic, 2009, PUNISHING POOR NEOLI Massoglia M, 2008, LAW SOC REV, V42, P275, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-5893.2008.00342.x Massoglia M, 2008, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V49, P56 Murray J, 2008, CRIME JUSTICE, V37, P133 Comfort Megan, 2008, DOING TIME TOGETHER Foster H, 2007, SOC PROBL, V54, P399, DOI 10.1525/sp.2007.54.4.399 Hummer RA, 2007, DEMOGRAPHY, V44, P441, DOI 10.1353/dem.2007.0028 Schempf AH, 2007, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V97, P1255, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.2006.093708 Schnittker J, 2007, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V48, P115 Harper S, 2007, JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC, V297, P1224, DOI 10.1001/jama.297.11.1224 Binswanger IA, 2007, NEW ENGL J MED, V356, P157, DOI 10.1056/NEJMsa064115 Comfort M, 2007, ANNU REV LAW SOC SCI, V3, P271, DOI 10.1146/annurev.lawsocsci.3.081806.112829 Clear Todd R., 2007, IMPRISONING COMMUNIT Mathews T J, 2007, Natl Vital Stat Rep, V55, P1 Kogan Michael D., 2007, PEDIATRICS, V119, pe929 Callaghan WM, 2006, PEDIATRICS, V118, P1566, DOI 10.1542/peds.2006-0860 Swann CA, 2006, DEMOGRAPHY, V43, P309, DOI 10.1353/dem.2006.0019 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), 2006, OECD HLTH DAT 2006 Hoyert DL, 2006, PEDIATRICS, V117, P168, DOI 10.1542/peds.2005-2587 Western Bruce, 2006, PUNISHMENT INEQUALIT Lopoo LM, 2005, J MARRIAGE FAM, V67, P721, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2005.00165.x MacDorman Marian F, 2005, Natl Vital Stat Rep, V53, P1 Frisbie W. Parker, 2005, HDB POPULATION, P251, DOI 10.1007/0-387-23106-4_10 Frisbie WP, 2004, DEMOGRAPHY, V41, P773, DOI 10.1353/dem.2004.0030 Beckfield J, 2004, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V45, P231 Pettit B, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P151 Braman Donald, 2004, DOING TIME OUTSIDE I Pager D, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V108, P937, DOI 10.1086/374403 Wise PH, 2003, ANNU REV PUBL HEALTH, V24, P341, DOI 10.1146/annurev.publhealth.24.100901.140816 Uggen C, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P777, DOI 10.2307/3088970 Link BG, 2002, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V92, P730, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.92.5.730 Campbell JC, 2002, LANCET, V359, P1331, DOI 10.1016/S0140-6736(02)08336-8 Western Bruce, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P477 Nurse Anne, 2002, FATHERHOOD ARRESTED Conley D, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P768, DOI 10.1086/338781 Greenberg DF, 2001, CRIMINOLOGY, V39, P615, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2001.tb00935.x Reichman NE, 2001, CHILD YOUTH SERV REV, V23, P303, DOI 10.1016/S0190-7409(01)00141-4 Faigeles Bonnie, 2001, J AFRICAN AM MEN, V6, P59 Western Bruce, 2001, PUNISHM SOC, V3, P43, DOI 10.1177/14624740122228249 Kramer MS, 2000, PAEDIATR PERINAT EP, V14, P194, DOI 10.1046/j.1365-3016.2000.00266.x Ruhm CJ, 2000, Q J ECON, V115, P617, DOI 10.1162/003355300554872 Cherlin AJ, 1999, DEMOGRAPHY, V36, P421, DOI 10.2307/2648081 Western B, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V104, P1030, DOI 10.1086/210135 Dinovitzer Ronit, 1999, CRIME JUSTICE, V26, P121, DOI 10.1086/449296 Gilbert B C, 1999, Matern Child Health J, V3, P199, DOI 10.1023/A:1022325421844 King Gary, 1999, LOGISTIC REGRESSION King Gary, 1999, RELOGIT RARE EVENTS King Gary, 1999, ESTIMATING ABSOLUTE Moss NE, 1998, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V88, P1354, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.88.9.1354 Frisbie WP, 1997, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V87, P1977, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.87.12.1977 Levitt SD, 1996, Q J ECON, V111, P319, DOI 10.2307/2946681 BIRD ST, 1995, SOC SCI MED, V41, P1507, DOI 10.1016/0277-9536(95)00029-7 CHOMITZ VR, 1995, FUTURE CHILD, V5, P121, DOI 10.2307/1602511 BIRD ST, 1995, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V85, P26, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.85.1.26 Korenbrot Carl C., 1995, FUTURE CHILD, V5, P103 Phelan Jo, 1995, J HLTH SOCIAL BEHAV, V35, P80, DOI DOI 10.2307/2626958 KOTELCHUCK M, 1994, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V84, P1414, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.84.9.1414 WILKINSON RG, 1992, BRIT MED J, V304, P165 LAVEIST TA, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V97, P1080, DOI 10.1086/229862 Adams M M, 1991, Paediatr Perinat Epidemiol, V5, P333, DOI 10.1111/j.1365-3016.1991.tb00718.x LAND KC, 1990, AM J SOCIOL, V95, P922, DOI 10.1086/229381 PAMPEL FC, 1986, DEMOGRAPHY, V23, P525, DOI 10.2307/2061349 PRESTON SH, 1984, DEMOGRAPHY, V21, P435, DOI 10.2307/2060909 Weber Max, 1978, ECON SOC, P3 Durkheim Emile, 1951, SUICIDE STUDY SOCIOL Schnittker Jason, AM SOCIOLOG IN PRESS Cooper Carey E., DEMOGRAPHY IN PRESS Heaton Paul S., EC INQUIRY IN PRESS Johnson Rucker, J LAW EC IN PRESS Wildeman Christopher, REV BLACK P IN PRESS NR 98 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD MAY PY 2012 VL 59 IS 2 BP 228 EP 257 DI 10.1525/sp.2012.59.2.228 PG 30 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 932OQ UT WOS:000303300800004 ER PT J AU Pais, J South, SJ Crowder, K AF Pais, Jeremy South, Scott J. Crowder, Kyle TI Metropolitan Heterogeneity and Minority Neighborhood Attainment: Spatial Assimilation or Place Stratification? SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE residential attainment; neighborhood inequality; segregation; racial stratification; ethnic stratification ID RACIAL RESIDENTIAL SEGREGATION; RACE; MIGRATION; BLACKS; CITY; PREFERENCES; INEQUALITY; PATTERNS; AMERICA; ACCESS AB Using geo-referenced data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, in conjunction with decennial census data, this research examines metropolitan-area variation in the ability of residentially mobile blacks, Hispanics, and whites to convert their income into two types of neighborhood outcomes neighborhood racial composition and neighborhood socioeconomic status. For destination tract racial composition, we find strong and near-universal support for the "weak version" of place stratification theory; relative to whites, the effect of individual income on the percent of the destination tract population that is non-Hispanic while is stronger for blacks and Hispanics, but even the highest earning minority group members move to tracts that are "less white" than the tracts that the highest-earning whites move to. In contrast, for moves into neighborhoods characterized by higher levels of average family income, we find substantial heterogeneity across metropolitan areas in minorities' capacity to convert income into neighborhood quality. A slight majority of metropolitan areas evince support for the "strong version" of place stratification theory, in which blacks and Hispanics are less able than whites to convert income into neighborhood socioeconomic status. However, a nontrivial number of metropolitan areas also evince support for spatial assimilation theory, where the highest-earning minorities achieve neighborhood parity with the highest-earning whites. Several metropolitan-area characteristics, including residential segregation, racial and ethnic composition, immigrant population size, poverty rates, and municipal fragmentation, emerge as significant predictors of minority-white differences in neighborhood attainment. C1 [Pais, Jeremy] Univ Connecticut, Dept Sociol, Storrs, CT 06269 USA. [South, Scott J.] SUNY Albany, Albany, NY 12222 USA. [Crowder, Kyle] Univ Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. RP Pais, J (reprint author), Univ Connecticut, Dept Sociol, Storrs, CT 06269 USA EM j.pais@uconn.edu CR Crowder K, 2011, AM SOCIOL REV, V76, P25, DOI 10.1177/0003122410396197 Logan JR, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P1069 Popkin Susan J., 2010, MOVING OPPORTUNITY T Krivo LJ, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P1765 U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, 2009, STAT CIT DAT SYST Clark WAV, 2009, URBAN AFF REV, V44, P334, DOI 10.1177/1078087408321497 Bischoff K, 2008, URBAN AFF REV, V44, P182, DOI 10.1177/1078087408320651 South SJ, 2008, SOC FORCES, V87, P415 Freeman L, 2008, URBAN AFF REV, V44, P3, DOI 10.1177/1078087408315876 Woldoff RA, 2008, URBAN STUD, V45, P527, DOI 10.1177/0042098007087334 GeoLytics, 2008, CENSUSCD NEIGHB CHAN U.S. Bureau of the Census, 2008, HIST FIN IND GOV FIS Knox Paul L., 2008, METROBURBIA Panel Study of Income Dynamics, 2008, PAN STUD INC DYN Timberlake JM, 2007, CITY COMMUNITY, V6, P335, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-6040.2007.00231.x Krysan M, 2007, SOC FORCES, V86, P699 Taub Richard P., 2007, THERE GOES NEIGHBORH Iceland J, 2006, SOC PROBL, V53, P248, DOI 10.1525/sp.2006.53.2.248 Crowder K, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P72 Tienda Marta, 2006, HISPANICS FUTURE AM, P100 Crowder K, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P1715, DOI 10.1086/428686 Ross SL, 2005, SOC PROBL, V52, P152, DOI 10.1525/sp.2005.52.2.152 Adelman RM, 2005, SOC SCI QUART, V86, P209, DOI 10.1111/j.0038-4941.2005.00299.x Iceland J, 2005, SOC SCI RES, V34, P252, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2004.02.001 Bayer P, 2004, J URBAN ECON, V56, P514, DOI 10.1016/j.jue.2004.06.002 Iceland J, 2004, SOC SCI RES, V33, P248, DOI 10.1016/S0049-089X(03)00056-5 Logan JR, 2004, DEMOGRAPHY, V41, P1, DOI 10.1353/dem.2004.0007 U.S. Bureau of the Census, 2004, CENS POP HOUS 2000 S Charles CZ, 2003, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V29, P167, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.29.010202.100002 Raudenbush S.W., 2002, HIERARCHICAL LINEAR Burnham KP, 2002, MODEL SELECTION MULT Lewis Mumford Center for Comparative Urban and Regional Research, 2001, AM COMM PROJ METR RA White MJ, 2000, SOC SCI QUART, V81, P997 Freeman L, 2000, J URBAN AFF, V22, P15, DOI 10.1111/0735-2166.00037 Logan John R., 2000, SOC FORCES, V79, P587 Alba Richard D., 2000, SOC PROBL, V47, P543 de la Garza R., 1998, LATINO NATL POLITICA Marcuse P, 1997, URBAN AFF REV, V33, P228, DOI 10.1177/107808749703300206 Cutler DM, 1997, Q J ECON, V112, P827, DOI 10.1162/003355397555361 Logan JR, 1996, SOC FORCES, V74, P851, DOI 10.2307/2580384 Frey WH, 1996, DEMOGRAPHY, V33, P35, DOI 10.2307/2061712 SQUIRES GD, 1995, SOC SCI QUART, V76, P823 Yinger John, 1995, CLOSED DOORS OPPORTU FARLEY R, 1994, AM SOCIOL REV, V59, P23, DOI 10.2307/2096131 LOGAN JR, 1993, DEMOGRAPHY, V30, P243, DOI 10.2307/2061840 Denton Nancy A., 1993, AM APARTHEID SEGREGA Alba Richard D., 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1388 U.S. Bureau of the Census, 1992, CENS POP HOUS 1990 S Logan John R., 1991, DEMOGRAPHY, V28, P431 Robinson G. K., 1991, STAT SCI, V6, P15, DOI DOI 10.1214/SS/1177011926 Molotch Harvey L., 1987, URBAN FORTUNES POLIT Lukas J. Anthony, 1985, COMMON GROUND TURBUL MASSEY DS, 1985, SOCIOL SOC RES, V69, P315 SHLAY AB, 1981, AM SOCIOL REV, V46, P703, DOI 10.2307/2095075 Lieberson Stanley, 1980, PIECE PIE BLACKS WHI Blalock H., 1967, THEORY MINORITY GROU NR 56 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD MAY PY 2012 VL 59 IS 2 BP 258 EP 281 DI 10.1525/sp.2012.59.2.258 PG 24 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 932OQ UT WOS:000303300800005 ER PT J AU York, R Rosa, EA AF York, Richard Rosa, Eugene A. TI Choking on Modernity: A Human Ecology of Air Pollution SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE air pollution; structural human ecology; households; environmental demography; STIRPAT ID ECOLOGICALLY UNEQUAL EXCHANGE; ENVIRONMENTAL KUZNETS CURVE; CARBON-DIOXIDE EMISSIONS; CROSS-NATIONAL ANALYSIS; POPULATION-GROWTH; ECONOMIC-GROWTH; IMPACT; QUALITY; MODERNIZATION; CONSEQUENCES AB Ground-level air pollution has serious effects on the natural environment and human health, but it has not received the same attention in the sociological literature as the greenhouse gases polluting the upper atmosphere. To address questions about the effects of social structural forces on environmental impacts, we analyze cross-national time-series data (1990-2000) to assess influences on the emission of ground-level air pollutants: sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, and non-methane volatile organic compounds. Drawing on human ecological theory, we move beyond previous analyses by assessing demographic effects on pollution emissions in a nuanced way by dividing population into the number of households and average household size. We found that the number of households has a greater effect on SO2 emissions than average household size. This suggests that the effect of population on the environment is not simply due to its size and growth, but also to its distribution across households. The difference we found has important implications, since the global growth rate in the number of households is greater than the growth rate in population. Furthermore, while the population growth rate in less developed nations is over four times that in developed nations, the household growth rate is only double. This finding suggests that developed nations will contribute more to air pollution in the coming years than would be assumed based on population growth alone. C1 [York, Richard] Univ Oregon, Dept Sociol, Eugene, OR 97403 USA. [Rosa, Eugene A.] Washington State Univ, Pullman, WA 99164 USA. RP York, R (reprint author), Univ Oregon, Dept Sociol, Eugene, OR 97403 USA EM rfyork@uoregon.edu CR Rudel TK, 2011, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V37, P221, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.012809.102639 United Nations (UN) Conference in Trade and Development, 2011, INW OUTW FOR DIR INV Emmons LK, 2010, GEOSCI MODEL DEV, V3, P43 Park Key Hong, 2010, THESIS STONY BROOK U Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), 2010, OUT NAT AIR STAT TRE Jorgenson AK, 2009, SOC PROBL, V56, P621, DOI 10.1525/sp.2009.56.4.621 Dietz T, 2009, HUM ECOL REV, V16, P114 Shandra JM, 2009, INT J COMP SOCIOL, V50, P285, DOI 10.1177/0020715209105143 United Nations (UN), 2009, WORLD FERT REP 2009 Polity IV Project, 2009, POL 4 ANN TIM SER DA York R, 2008, SOC PROBL, V55, P370, DOI 10.1525/sp.2008.55.3.370 EDGAR, 2008, EM DAT GLOB ATM RES Gallup, 2008, GALL ANN ENV POLL MA York R, 2007, SOCIOL FORUM, V22, P532, DOI 10.1111/j.1573-7861.2007.00034.x O'Brien RM, 2007, QUAL QUANT, V41, P673, DOI 10.1007/s11135-006-9018-6 York R, 2007, SOC SCI RES, V36, P855, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2006.06.007 Jorgenson AK, 2007, SOC PROBL, V54, P371, DOI 10.1525/sp.2007.54.3.371 Dietz T, 2007, FRONT ECOL ENVIRON, V5, P13, DOI 10.1890/1540-9295(2007)5[13:DTHEF]2.0.CO;2 [Anonymous], 2007, CBS NEWS NY TIME APR World Bank, 2007, WORLD DEV IND Perz SG, 2006, HUM ECOL, V34, P829, DOI 10.1007/s10745-006-9039-8 Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change (IPCC), 2006, IPCC GUID NAT GREENH, V1, P71 Gonzalez George A., 2006, POLITICS AIR POLLUTI Wellenius GA, 2005, STROKE, V36, P2549, DOI 10.1161/01.STR.0000189687.78760.47 Rosa EA, 2004, AMBIO, V33, P509, DOI 10.1639/0044-7447(2004)033[0509:TTADOE]2.0.CO;2 Shandra JM, 2004, SOCIOL INQ, V74, P520, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2004.00103.x Peters A, 2004, NEW ENGL J MED, V351, P1721, DOI 10.1056/NEJMoa040203 Cole MA, 2004, POPUL ENVIRON, V26, P5, DOI 10.1023/B:POEN.0000039950.85422.eb Stern DI, 2004, WORLD DEV, V32, P1419, DOI 10.1016/j.worlddev.2004.03.004 Kurzman C, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P937, DOI 10.1086/378929 Akimoto H, 2003, SCIENCE, V302, P1716, DOI 10.1126/science.1092666 York R, 2003, ECOL ECON, V46, P351, DOI 10.1016/S0921-8009(03)00188-5 York R, 2003, ORGAN ENVIRON, V16, P273, DOI 10.1177/1086026603256299 York R, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P279, DOI 10.2307/1519769 Shi AQ, 2003, ECOL ECON, V44, P29, DOI 10.1016/S0921-8009(02)00223-9 Liu JG, 2003, NATURE, V421, P530, DOI 10.1038/nature01359 York Richard, 2003, INT J SOCIOLOGY SOCI, V23, P31, DOI 10.1108/01443330310790291 Grimes Peter E., 2003, J WORLD SYSTEMS RES, V9, P277 Kellman Nico, 2003, NATURE, V421, P489 Ehrhardt-Martinez K, 2002, SOC SCI QUART, V83, P226, DOI 10.1111/1540-6237.00080 O'Neill BC, 2002, POPUL DEV REV, V28, P53 Yauk Carole L., 2002, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V99, P18904 United Nations (UN) Population Division, 2002, WORLD POP PROSP 2002 United Nations (UN) Centre for Human Settlements, 2001, CIT GLOB WORLD GLOB Dunaway Wilma, 2001, J WORLD SYSTEMS RES, V7, P2 Frank DJ, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P96, DOI 10.2307/2657291 Cavlovic T. A., 2000, Agricultural and Resource Economics Review, V29, P32 Mol A., 2000, ECOLOGICAL MODERNIZA Greene W.H., 2000, ECONOMETRIC ANAL Cramer JC, 1998, DEMOGRAPHY, V35, P45, DOI 10.2307/3004026 Davis DL, 1997, LANCET, V350, P1341, DOI 10.1016/S0140-6736(97)10209-4 Dietz T, 1997, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V94, P175, DOI 10.1073/pnas.94.1.175 GROSSMAN GM, 1995, Q J ECON, V110, P353, DOI 10.2307/2118443 Cohen Joel E., 1995, MANY PEOPLE CAN EART Mol Arthur P. J., 1995, REFINEMENT PRODUCTIO Rosa Eugene A., 1994, HUMAN ECOLOGY REV, V1, P277 LUTZENHISER L, 1993, SOC PROBL, V40, P50, DOI 10.1525/sp.1993.40.1.03x0072t BOLLEN KA, 1982, EVALUATION REV, V6, P521, DOI 10.1177/0193841X8200600404 Catton Jr. William R., 1980, OVERSHOOT ECOLOGICAL Schnaiberg Allan, 1980, ENV SURPLUS SCARCITY DUNLAP RE, 1979, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V5, P243, DOI 10.1146/annurev.so.05.080179.001331 Converse Philip E., 1976, QUALITY AM LIFE PERC EHRLICH PR, 1971, SCIENCE, V171, P1212, DOI 10.1126/science.171.3977.1212 Kuznets S, 1955, AM ECON REV, V45, P1 Weber Max, 1924, M WEBER ESSAYS SOCIO, P180 United Nations Environment Program (UNEP), GLOB EC OUT IN PRESS Rosa Eugene A., POPULATION IN PRESS NR 67 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD MAY PY 2012 VL 59 IS 2 BP 282 EP 300 DI 10.1525/sp.2012.59.2.282 PG 19 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 932OQ UT WOS:000303300800006 ER PT J AU Gauchat, G AF Gauchat, Gordon TI Politicization of Science in the Public Sphere: A Study of Public Trust in the United States, 1974 to 2010 SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE cultural authority of science; political ideology; public understanding of science; science and technology ID PERIOD-COHORT ANALYSIS; CROSS-SECTION SURVEYS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; DEFICIT MODEL; ATTITUDES; KNOWLEDGE; MOVEMENTS; ALIENATION; AMERICA; POLICY AB This study explores time trends in public trust in science in the United States from 1974 to 2010. More precisely, I test Mooney's (2005) claim that conservatives in the United States have become increasingly distrustful of science. Using data from the 1974 to 2010 General Social Survey, I examine group differences in trust in science and group-specific change in these attitudes over time. Results show that group differences in trust in science are largely stable over the period, except for respondents identifying as conservative. Conservatives began the period with the highest trust in science, relative to liberals and moderates, and ended the period with the lowest. The patterns for science are also unique when compared to public trust in other secular institutions. Results show enduring differences in trust in science by social class, ethnicity, gender, church attendance, and region. I explore the implications of these findings, specifically, the potential for political divisions to emerge over the cultural authority of science and the social role of experts in the formation of public policy. C1 Univ N Carolina, Sheps Ctr Hlth Serv Res, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA. RP Gauchat, G (reprint author), Univ N Carolina, Sheps Ctr Hlth Serv Res, 725 Martin Luther King Jr Blvd, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA EM ggauchat@schsr.unc.edu CR Gauchat G, 2011, PUBLIC UNDERST SCI, V20, P751, DOI 10.1177/0963662510365246 Gross N, 2011, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V37, P325, DOI 10.1146/annurev-soc-081309-150050 Marsden Peter, 2011, GEN SOCIAL SURVEYS 1 Lave R, 2010, SOC STUD SCI, V40, P659, DOI 10.1177/0306312710378549 Martin JL, 2010, SOCIOL FORUM, V25, P1, DOI 10.1111/j.1573-7861.2009.01154.x Oreskes N., 2010, MERCHANTS DOUBT HAND Blee KM, 2010, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V36, P269, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.012809.102602 Coalition on the Public Understanding of Science (COPUS), 2010, YEAR SCI 2009 NAT CE Jones Jeffery M., 2010, GALLUP National Science Board, 2010, SCI ENG IND White House, 2010, NEC SCI Gauchat Gordon, 2010, THESIS U CONNECTICUT Vaisey S, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P1675 Newport Frank, 2009, GALLUP Long J. Scott, 2009, GROUP COMPARIS UNPUB Krugman Paul, 2009, CONSCIENCE LIBERAL Zmerli S, 2008, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V72, P706, DOI 10.1093/poq/nfn054 Jacques PJ, 2008, ENVIRON POLIT, V17, P349, DOI 10.1080/09644010802055576 Yang Y, 2008, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V36, P297, DOI 10.1177/0049124106292360 Moore K, 2008, PRINC STUD CULT, P1 Allum N, 2008, PUBLIC UNDERST SCI, V17, P35, DOI 10.1077/0963662506070159 National Science Board, 2008, SCI ENG IND Burack Cynthia, 2008, SIN SEX DEMOCRACY AN Gauchat Gordon, 2008, SOCIOL FOCUS, V41, P337 Hackett E. J., 2008, HDB SCI TECHNOLOGY S, P433 Newport Frank, 2007, GALLUP Weakliem DL, 2006, SOCIOL FORUM, V21, P415, DOI 10.1007/s11206-006-9024-4 McCarty Nolan, 2006, POLARIZED AM DANCE I Yang Y, 2006, SOCIOL METHODOL, V36, P75, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9531.2006.00175.x MOONEY CHRIS, 2005, REPUBLICAN WAR SCI Yearley Steven, 2005, MAKING SENSE SCI Moore Kelly, 2005, NEW POLITICAL SOCIOL Miller JD, 2004, PUBLIC UNDERST SCI, V13, P273, DOI 10.1177/0963662504044908 Sturgis P, 2004, PUBLIC UNDERST SCI, V13, P55, DOI 10.1177/0963662504042690 Jasanoff Sheila, 2004, STATES KNOWLEDGE KNO Frank Thomas, 2004, WHATS MATTER KANSAS McCright AM, 2003, SOC PROBL, V50, P348, DOI 10.1525/sp.2003.50.3.348 Bak HJ, 2001, SOC SCI QUART, V82, P779, DOI 10.1111/0038-4941.00059 Loftus J, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P762, DOI 10.2307/3088957 Ansell A. E., 2001, UNRAVELING RIGHT NEW, P148 Bauer MW, 2000, SCI TECHNOL HUM VAL, V25, P30 McCright AM, 2000, SOC PROBL, V47, P499, DOI 10.1525/sp.2000.47.4.03x0305s Hayes BC, 2000, PUBLIC UNDERST SCI, V9, P433, DOI 10.1088/0963-6625/9/4/306 Pharr SJ, 2000, J DEMOCR, V11, P5 Zehr SC, 2000, PUBLIC UNDERST SCI, V9, P85, DOI 10.1088/0963-6625/9/2/301 Yearley S, 2000, PUBLIC UNDERST SCI, V9, P105, DOI 10.1088/0963-6625/9/2/302 Allison PD, 1999, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V28, P186, DOI 10.1177/0049124199028002003 Paxton P, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P88, DOI 10.1086/210268 Gieryn T.F, 1999, CULTURAL BOUNDARIES Inglehart R, 1997, MODERNIZATION POSTMO Ansell Amy E., 1997, NEW RIGHT NEW RACISM Raftery AE, 1995, SOCIOL METHODOL, V25, P111, DOI 10.2307/271063 Wynne B.E., 1995, HDB SCI TECHNOLOGY S, P361 Woodhouse Edward J., 1995, HDB SCI TECHNOLOGY S, P533 Shapin Steve, 1994, SOCIAL HIST TRUTH Yearley Steven, 1994, PUBLIC UNDERST SCI, V3, P245, DOI 10.1088/0963-6625/3/3/001 Holton Gerald, 1993, SCI ANTISCIENCE Beck U, 1992, RISK SOC NEW MODERNI Gamson W. A, 1992, TALKING POLITICS Giddens A., 1991, MODERNITY SELF IDENT HILGARTNER S, 1990, SOC STUD SCI, V20, P519, DOI 10.1177/030631290020003006 Barber Bernard, 1990, SOCIAL STUDIES SCI Jasanoff Sheila, 1990, 5 BRANCH SCI ADVISOR Nash George H., 1988, CONSERVATIVE INTELLE JENKINS JC, 1985, SOC PROBL, V33, P130, DOI 10.1525/sp.1985.33.2.03a00040 Knorr Cetina Karin, 1983, SOC STUD SCI, V12, P101 Peterson Bruce L., 1981, METHODOLOGICAL REPOR Smith Tom W., 1981, METHODOLOGICAL REPOR Latour B., 1979, LAB LIFE CONSTRUCTIO Luhmann N., 1979, TRUST POWER Barnes Barry, 1977, INTERESTS GROWTH KNO Bloor D, 1976, KNOWLEDGE SOCIAL IMA HOUSE JS, 1975, AM SOCIOL REV, V40, P123, DOI 10.2307/2094341 Coser L. A., 1975, IDEA SOCIAL STRUCTUR, P103 Hofstadter Richard, 1970, ANTIINTELLECTUALISM Barber B., 1962, SOCIOLOGY SCIENCE, P7 Barber Bernard, 1952, SCI SOCIAL ORDER Whitehead Albert North, 1946, SCI MODERN WORLD LOW Merton Robert K., 1938, PHILOS SCI, V5, P321, DOI 10.1086/286513 NR 79 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD APR PY 2012 VL 77 IS 2 BP 167 EP 187 DI 10.1177/0003122412438225 PG 21 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 916GV UT WOS:000302089500001 ER PT J AU Kim, H Pfaff, S AF Kim, Hyojoung Pfaff, Steven TI Structure and Dynamics of Religious Insurgency: Students and the Spread of the Reformation SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE bridge leaders; diffusion; Reformation; university students ID NETWORKS; DIFFUSION; MOVEMENTS; ORGANIZATIONS; OPPORTUNITY; REPRESSION; EMERGENCE; DISSENT; HISTORY; EMPIRE AB The Protestant Reformation swept across Central Europe in the early-sixteenth century, leaving cities divided into Evangelical and Catholic camps as some instituted reforms and others remained loyal to the Roman Church. In offering a new explanation of the Reformation, we develop a theory that identifies ideologically mobilized students as bridge actors-that is, agents of religious contention who helped concatenate incidents of local insurgency into a loosely organized Evangelical movement by bridging structural holes. Building on existing literature, we offer a novel way to measure the influence of contending religious movements through university enrollments; we propose that the institution of reform can be partially explained by the varying degree of exposure that cities had to Evangelical activist and Catholic loyalist university students. Based on statistical analysis of a novel dataset comprising cities in the Holy Roman Empire with a population of 2,000 or more from 1523 to 1545, we find support for the role of university students as bridge actors linking critical communities at universities to arenas of urban contention. The greater a city's exposure to heterodox ideology through city-to-university ties, the greater its odds of instituting the Reformation. C1 [Kim, Hyojoung] Calif State Univ Los Angeles, Dept Sociol, Los Angeles, CA 90032 USA. [Pfaff, Steven] Univ Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. RP Kim, H (reprint author), Calif State Univ Los Angeles, Dept Sociol, 5151 State Univ Dr, Los Angeles, CA 90032 USA EM hkim@calstatela.edu CR Stamatov P, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P607, DOI 10.1177/0003122410374083 Becker SO, 2009, Q J ECON, V124, P531 Cantoni Davide, 2009, EC EFFECTS PRO UNPUB Nexon DH, 2009, PRINC STUD INT HIST, P1 Isaac L, 2008, SOC FORCES, V87, P33 Mische Ann, 2007, PARTISAN PUBLICS COM Hillerbrand Hans J., 2007, DIVISION CHRISTENDOM Andrews KT, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P752 Ekelund Robert B., 2006, MARKETPLACE CHRISTIA Karant-Nunn SC, 2005, RENAISSANCE QUART, V58, P1101, DOI 10.1353/ren.2008.0933 Centola D, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P1009, DOI 10.1086/427321 Burt Ronald S., 2005, BROKERAGE CLOSURE Morke Olaf, 2005, REFORMATION Weingast Barry R., 2005, PREFERENCES SITUATIO, P161 Pettegree Andrew, 2005, REFORMATION CULTURE Grendler PF, 2004, RENAISSANCE QUART, V57, P1 Fuhner Jochen A., 2004, KIRCHEN UND ANTIREFO Almeida PD, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P345, DOI 10.1086/378395 Goodwin J., 2003, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS REA Ruegg Walter, 2003, HIST U EUROPE, VII Hammerstein Notker, 2003, BILDUNG WISSENSCHAFT, V15 Stark Rodney, 2003, GLORY GOD Myers Daniel J., 2003, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS NET, P173 Nicholas David, 2003, URBAN EUROPE 1100 17 Andrews KT, 2002, SOC FORCES, V80, P911, DOI 10.1353/sof.2002.0001 Magocsi Paul Robert, 2002, HIST ATLAS CENTRAL E Witte John, 2002, LAW PROTESTANTISM Steiner Bruno, 2002, LEXIKON REFORMATIONS Taylor Larissa, 2002, SOLDIERS CHRIST PREA Palloni A, 2001, DIFFUSION PROCESSES AND FERTILITY TRANSITION: SELECTED PERSPECTIVES, P66 Littell Franklin, 2001, HIST ATLAS CHRISTIAN Karant-Nunn Susan C., 2001, PREACHERS PEOPLE REF, P193 Scribner Robert W., 2001, RELIG CULTURE GERMAN Goldstone Jack A., 2001, SILENCE VOICE STUDY, P179 Hedstrom P, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P145, DOI 10.1086/303109 Eckert EA, 2000, B HIST MED, V74, P1 Kitts James, 2000, MOBILIZATION, V5, P241 Dixon C. Scott, 2000, REFORMATION WORLD, P148 Miethke Jurgen, 2000, U SCH MEDIEVAL SOC Schwinges Rainer Christoph, 2000, UNIVERSITIES SCHOOLI, P32 Wriedt Klaus, 2000, U SCH MEDIEVAL SOC, P49 Watts Duncan J., 1999, SMALL WORLDS DYNAMIC Asche Matthias, 1999, BLATTER DTSCH LANDES, V135, P1 Tracy James D., 1999, EUROPES REFORMATIONS Moeller Bernd, 1999, GERMAN REFORMATION, P33 Brady Thomas J., 1999, GERMAN REFORMATION, P91 Kintzinger M, 1999, Z HIST FORSCH, V26, P1 Rochon T. R., 1998, CULTURE MOVES IDEAS Schwinges Rainer Christoph, 1998, BERICHTE WISSENSCHAF, V21, P5, DOI 10.1002/bewi.19980210104 Brady Thomas J., 1998, COMMUNITIES POLITICS te Brake Wayne, 1998, SHAPING HIST ORDINAR Kim Hyojoung, 1998, THESIS U N CAROLINA Greengrass Mark, 1998, EUROPEAN REFORMATION Gilmont Jean-Francois, 1998, REFORMATION BOOK Ansell CK, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P359, DOI 10.1086/231211 Kim HJ, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P70, DOI 10.2307/2657453 Long J. Scott, 1997, REGRESSION MODELS CA Neuhaus Helmut, 1997, REICH FRUHEN NEUZEIT Dupaquier Jacques, 1997, HIST POPULATIONS EUR Robnett Belinda, 1997, LONG LONG AFRICAN AM Nicholas David, 1997, LATER MEDIEVAL CITY Meyer DS, 1996, AM J SOCIOL, V101, P1628, DOI 10.1086/230869 Ekelund Robert B., 1996, SACRED TRUST MEDIEVA Schubert Ernst, 1996, FURSTLICHE HERRSCHAF Scott Tom, 1996, GERMANY NEW SOCIAL E, P113 Pfister Christian, 1996, GERMANY NEW SOCIAL E, P33 Hillerbrand Hans J., 1996, OXFORD ENCY REFORMAT Schwiebert Ernest, 1996, REFORMATION, VII Stark Rodney, 1996, RISE CHRISTIANITY BRAUN N, 1995, RATION SOC, V7, P167, DOI 10.1177/1043463195007002005 Rogers E.M, 1995, DIFFUSION INNOVATION Gould Roger V., 1995, INSURGENT IDENTITIES Valente T.W., 1995, NETWORK MODELS DIFFU Park Joon-Chul, 1995, THESIS OHIO STATE U Israel Jonathan, 1995, DUTCH REPUBLIC HEDSTROM P, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V99, P1157, DOI 10.1086/230408 Edwards M.U., 1994, PRINTING PROPAGANDA Moeller Bernd, 1994, KIRCHE GESELLSCHAFT, P148 Lichbach Mark Irving, 1994, REBELS DILEMMA MCADAM D, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V99, P640, DOI 10.1086/230319 Marwell G., 1993, CRITICAL MASS COLLEC HOOVER D, 1992, J CONFLICT RESOLUT, V36, P150, DOI 10.1177/0022002792036001006 Burt R.S, 1992, STRUCTURAL HOLES Blickle Peter, 1992, COMMUNAL REFORMATION KAHNEMAN D, 1991, J ECON PERSPECT, V5, P193 Goldstone Jack, 1991, REVOLUTION REBELLION Chong Dennis, 1991, COLLECTIVE ACTION CI Baeumer Maximillian, 1991, REFORMATION ALS REVO Bagchi David, 1991, LUTHERS EARLIEST OPP Cameron Euan, 1991, EUROPEAN REFORMATION Coleman J.S, 1990, FDN SOCIAL THEORY Tracy James D., 1990, HOLLAND HABSBURG RUL Kohler Alfred, 1990, REICH KAMPF HEGEMONI Wuthnow Robert, 1989, MMUNITIES DISCOURSE Ziegler Walter, 1989, TERRITORIEN REICHES, V1-7 Kobler Gerhard, 1989, HIST LEXIKON DTSCH L Roper Lyndal, 1989, HOLY HOUSEHOLD Schilling H., 1988, AUFBRUCH KRISE DEUTS Maczak Antoni, 1988, KLIENTELSYSTEME EURO LICHBACH MI, 1987, J CONFLICT RESOLUT, V31, P266, DOI 10.1177/0022002787031002003 Useem Bert, 1987, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS ORG McGrath Alister, 1987, INTELLECTUAL ORIGINS Karant-Nunn Susan C., 1987, ZWICKAU TRANSITION 1 SEA TF, 1986, CENT EUR HIST, V19, P235 Gabler Ulrich, 1986, H ZWINGLI Tracy James D., 1986, LUTHER MODERN STATE Scribner Robert W., 1986, GERMAN REFORMATION SINNOTT RW, 1984, SKY TELESCOPE, V68, P159 Luker Kristin, 1984, ABORTION POLITICS MO Hendrix Scott, 1984, LEADERS REFORMATION, P43 Stupperich Robert, 1984, REFORMATORENLEXIKON Fulbrook Mary, 1983, PIETY POLITICS LO CYH, 1982, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V8, P107, DOI 10.1146/annurev.so.08.080182.000543 Scribner Robert W., 1980, REFORMATION PRINCIPL, P90 Eisenstein Elizabeth L., 1980, PRINTING PRESS AGENT Locher Gottfried W., 1979, ZWINGLISCHE REFORMAT ROZMAN G, 1978, J INTERDISCIPL HIST, V9, P65, DOI 10.2307/203669 Strauss Gerald, 1978, LUTHERS HOUSE LEARNI Potter George R., 1977, U ZWINGLI Berthold Lothar, 1976, ATLAS GESCH, VI Hannemann Manfred, 1975, 167 U CHIC DEP GEOGR Moeller B., 1972, IMPERIAL CITIES REFO Russell Josiah Cox, 1972, MEDIEVAL REGIONS THE Swanson Guy E., 1967, RELIG REGIME Strauss Gerald, 1966, NUREMBERG 17 CENTURY Engels Friedrich, 1966, PEASANT WAR GERMANY Dollinger Phillipe, 1964, HANSE 12 17 SIECLES Weber Max, 1962, CITY Tavard George, 1957, CHURCH HIST, V26, P275, DOI 10.2307/3161746 Kidd Beresford J., 1911, DOCUMENTS ILLUSTRATI Kautsky Karl, 1897, COMMUNISM CENTRAL EU Spruner von Merz Karl, 1880, SPRUNER MENKE HANDAT NR 132 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD APR PY 2012 VL 77 IS 2 BP 188 EP 215 DI 10.1177/0003122411435905 PG 28 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 916GV UT WOS:000302089500002 ER PT J AU Wildeman, C Schnittker, J Turney, K AF Wildeman, Christopher Schnittker, Jason Turney, Kristin TI Despair by Association? The Mental Health of Mothers with Children by Recently Incarcerated Fathers SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE depression; family instability; incarceration; life dissatisfaction; stratification ID PSYCHIATRIC-DISORDERS; SOCIAL-CONSEQUENCES; FAMILY-STRUCTURE; UNITED-STATES; LIFE-COURSE; PATERNAL INCARCERATION; PARENTAL IMPRISONMENT; ANTISOCIAL-BEHAVIOR; MASS INCARCERATION; FRAGILE FAMILIES AB A burgeoning literature considers the consequences of mass imprisonment for the well-being of adult men and-albeit to a lesser degree-their children. Yet virtually no quantitative research considers the consequences of mass imprisonment for the well-being of the women who are the link between (former) prisoners and their children. This article extends research on the collateral consequences of mass imprisonment by considering the association between paternal incarceration and maternal mental health using data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study. Results show that recent paternal incarceration increases a mother's risk of a major depressive episode and her level of life dissatisfaction, net of a variety of influences including prior mental health. The empirical design lends confidence to a causal interpretation: effects of recent incarceration persist even when the sample is limited to mothers attached to previously incarcerated men, which provides a rigorous counterfactual. In addition, the empirical design is comprehensive; after isolating key mechanisms anticipated in the literature, we reduce the relationship between recent paternal incarceration and maternal mental health to statistical insignificance. These results imply that the penal system may have important effects on poor women's well-being beyond increasing their economic insecurity, compromising their marriage markets, or magnifying their risk of divorce. C1 [Wildeman, Christopher] Yale Univ, Dept Sociol, New Haven, CT 06520 USA. [Schnittker, Jason] Univ Penn, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA. [Turney, Kristin] Univ Calif Irvine, Irvine, CA USA. RP Wildeman, C (reprint author), Yale Univ, Dept Sociol, POB 208265, New Haven, CT 06520 USA EM christopher.wildeman@yale.edu CR Roettger ME, 2011, CRIMINOLOGY, V49, P1109, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2011.00253.x Schwartz-Soicher O, 2011, SOC SERV REV, V85, P447, DOI 10.1086/661925 Kim HS, 2011, AM SOCIOL REV, V76, P487, DOI 10.1177/0003122411407748 Geller A, 2011, DEMOGRAPHY, V48, P25, DOI 10.1007/s13524-010-0009-9 Turney K, 2011, J MARRIAGE FAM, V73, P149, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2010.00795.x Wildeman Christopher, 2011, CRIMINOLOGY PUBLIC P, V10, P791 Maguire Kathleen, 2011, SOURCEBOOK CRIMINAL Wildeman C, 2010, SOC FORCES, V89, P285 Charles KK, 2010, REV ECON STAT, V92, P614, DOI 10.1162/REST_a_00022 Cherlin AJ, 2010, J MARRIAGE FAM, V72, P403, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2010.00710.x Harris A, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P1753 Wakefield S, 2010, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V36, P387, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.012809.102551 Western Bruce, 2010, FUTURE CHILD, V20, P181 Giordano Peggy C., 2010, LEGACIES CRIME FOLLO Geller A, 2009, SOC SCI QUART, V90, P1186 Mollborn S, 2009, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V50, P310 Goffman A, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P339 Meadows SO, 2009, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V50, P115 Foster H, 2009, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V623, P179, DOI 10.1177/0002716208331123 Western B, 2009, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V621, P221, DOI 10.1177/0002716208324850 Wildeman Christopher, 2009, DEMOGRAPHY, V6, P265 Swisher RR, 2008, J FAM ISSUES, V29, P1067, DOI 10.1177/0192513X08316273 Carlson MJ, 2008, DEMOGRAPHY, V45, P461 Meadows SO, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P314 Patterson EJ, 2008, J QUANT CRIMINOL, V24, P33, DOI 10.1007/s10940-007-9037-z Murray J, 2008, CRIME JUSTICE, V37, P133 Comfort Megan, 2008, DOING TIME TOGETHER Maruschak Laura M., 2008, BUREAU JUSTICE STAT Bendheim-Thoman Center for Research on Child Well-being, 2008, INTR FRAG FAM PUBL U Massoglia Michael, 2008, HEALTH, V49, P56 Teitler J. O., 2008, J MARRIAGE FAM, V70, P770 Foster H, 2007, SOC PROBL, V54, P399, DOI 10.1525/sp.2007.54.4.399 Schnittker J, 2007, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V48, P115 Fomby P, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P181 Comfort M, 2007, ANNU REV LAW SOC SCI, V3, P271, DOI 10.1146/annurev.lawsocsci.3.081806.112829 Becker SO, 2007, STATA J, V7, P71 Royston P, 2007, STATA J, V7, P445 Western Bruce, 2006, PUNISHMENT INEQUALIT Murray J, 2005, J CHILD PSYCHOL PSYC, V46, P1269, DOI 10.1111/j.1469-7610.2005.01433.x Lopoo LM, 2005, J MARRIAGE FAM, V67, P721, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2005.00165.x Avellar S, 2005, J MARRIAGE FAM, V67, P315, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2005.00118.x Travis J., 2005, PRISONERS ONCE REMOV, P259 McLanahan S, 2004, DEMOGRAPHY, V41, P607, DOI 10.1353/dem.2004.0033 Pettit B, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P151 Braman Donald, 2004, DOING TIME OUTSIDE I Kessler RC, 2004, INT J METH PSYCH RES, V13, P93, DOI 10.1002/mpr.168 Nelson Timothy J., 2004, IMPRISONING AM SOCIA, P46 Waldfogel Jane, 2004, IMPRISONING AM SOCIA, P97 Braman Donald, 2004, J RELIG SPIRITUALITY, V23, P27, DOI 10.1300/J377v23n01_03 Jencks Christopher, 2004, SOCIAL INEQUALITY, P3 Pager D, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V108, P937, DOI 10.1086/374403 Leuven E, 2003, PSMATCH2 STATA MODUL Jaffee SR, 2003, CHILD DEV, V74, P109, DOI 10.1111/1467-8624.t01-1-00524 Bonczar Thomas, 2003, PREVALENCE IMPRISONM Liebow Elliot, 2003, TALLYS CORNER STUDY Aalto-Setala T, 2002, PSYCHOL MED, V32, P1309, DOI 10.1017/S0033291702005810 Western B, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P526, DOI 10.2307/3088944 Kessler RC, 2002, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V43, P171, DOI 10.2307/3090195 Mirowsky J, 2002, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V43, P152, DOI 10.2307/3090194 Link BG, 2002, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V43, P247, DOI 10.2307/3090200 Nurse Anne, 2002, FATHERHOOD ARRESTED Allison P. D., 2002, MISSING DATA Clarke-Stewart K. Allison, 2002, PRISONERS ONCE REMOV Li YFP, 2001, J AM STAT ASSOC, V96, P870, DOI 10.1198/016214501753208573 Reichman NE, 2001, CHILD YOUTH SERV REV, V23, P303, DOI 10.1016/S0190-7409(01)00141-4 Faigeles Bonnie, 2001, J AFRICAN AM MEN, V6, P59 Amato PR, 2000, J MARRIAGE FAM, V62, P1269, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2000.01269.x Ross CE, 2000, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V41, P177, DOI 10.2307/2676304 Miech RA, 2000, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V41, P162, DOI 10.2307/2676303 Edin K., 2000, AM PROSPECT, V11, P26 Cherlin AJ, 1999, DEMOGRAPHY, V36, P421, DOI 10.2307/2648081 King V, 1999, J MARRIAGE FAM, V61, P385, DOI 10.2307/353756 Dinovitzer Ronit, 1999, CRIME JUSTICE, V26, P121, DOI 10.1086/449296 Strack Fritz, 1999, WELL BEING FDN HEDON, P61 Williams David R., 1999, HDB SOCIOLOGY MENTAL, P151, DOI 10.1007/0-387-36223-1_8 Kessler RC, 1998, AM J PSYCHIAT, V155, P1092 Kessler RC, 1998, INT J METH PSYCH RES, V7, P171, DOI 10.1002/mpr.47 Patterson Orlando, 1998, RITUALS BLOOD CONSEQ Kessler RC, 1997, AM J PSYCHIAT, V154, P1405 Du Bois W. E. B., 1996, PHILADELPHIA NEGRO S KESSLER RC, 1995, AM J PSYCHIAT, V152, P1026 AMATO PR, 1995, SOC FORCES, V73, P895, DOI 10.2307/2580551 Noble Carolyn, 1995, PRISONERS FAMILIES E McLanahan Sara, 1994, GROWING SINGLE PAREN McWilliams Brenda, 1994, FAMILY TIES ENGLISH HEADEY B, 1993, SOC INDIC RES, V29, P63, DOI 10.1007/BF01136197 GABEL S, 1992, FAM PROCESS, V31, P303, DOI 10.1111/j.1545-5300.1992.00303.x Gottfredson M. R., 1990, GEN THEORY CRIME DICKMAN SJ, 1990, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V58, P95, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.58.1.95 Fishman Laura T., 1990, WOMEN WALL STUDY PRI LALONDE RJ, 1986, AM ECON REV, V76, P604 WINSHIP C, 1984, AM SOCIOL REV, V49, P512, DOI 10.2307/2095465 LOWENSTEIN A, 1984, J MARRIAGE FAM, V46, P699, DOI 10.2307/352611 LEAMER EE, 1983, AM ECON REV, V73, P31 DANIEL SW, 1981, COMMUNITY MENT HLT J, V17, P310, DOI 10.1007/BF00779387 Stack Carol, 1974, ALL OUR KIN SCHWARTZ MC, 1974, FED PROBAT, V38, P20 Morris Pauline, 1965, PRISONERS THEIR FAMI Office of Policy Planning and Research U.S. Department of Labor, 1965, NEGR FAM CAS NAT ACT Cooper Carey E., DEMOGRAPHY NR 100 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD APR PY 2012 VL 77 IS 2 BP 216 EP 243 DI 10.1177/0003122411436234 PG 28 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 916GV UT WOS:000302089500003 ER PT J AU Rippeyoung, PLF Noonan, MC AF Rippeyoung, Phyllis L. F. Noonan, Mary C. TI Is Breastfeeding Truly Cost Free? Income Consequences of Breastfeeding for Women SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE breastfeeding; income; motherhood; work-family conflict ID MATERNAL EMPLOYMENT; UNITED-STATES; WORK; INITIATION; DURATION; MOTHERHOOD; HEALTH; POLITICS; EARNINGS; FAMILY AB Based on studies showing health advantages for breastfeeding mothers and their infants, pediatricians and other breastfeeding advocates encourage new mothers to breastfeed their babies for at least the first six months of their infants' lives, arguing that breast milk is best for infants, families, and society, and it is cost free. Few empirical studies, however, document how the decision to breastfeed instead of formula-feed is associated with women's post-birth earnings. This is an important omission, given that the majority of women today work for pay, and many work in job environments incompatible with breastfeeding. Using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, our results show that mothers who breastfeed for six months or longer suffer more severe and more prolonged earnings losses than do mothers who breastfeed for shorter durations or not at all. The larger post-birth drop in earnings for long-duration breastfeeders is due to a larger reduction in labor supply. We discuss the implications of these findings for gender equality at home and at work. C1 [Rippeyoung, Phyllis L. F.] Acadia Univ, Dept Sociol, Wolfville, NS B4P 2R6, Canada. [Noonan, Mary C.] Univ Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242 USA. RP Rippeyoung, PLF (reprint author), Acadia Univ, Dept Sociol, 10 Highland Ave,BAC 302, Wolfville, NS B4P 2R6, Canada EM phyllis.rippeyoung@acadiau.ca CR Moulton Anthony D., 2010, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V101, P217 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 2010, BREASTF REP CARD US Hall Keith, 2010, 1026 US DEP LAB US D La Leche League International, 2010, WOM ART BREASTF Wallace Lori Ebert, 2010, 5 FEM BREASTF S GREE Rosin Hanna, 2009, ATLANTIC MONTHLY APR Gregory Mary, 2009, OXFORD EC PAPERS S1, V61, pi76 Guendelman S, 2009, PEDIATRICS, V123, pE38, DOI 10.1542/peds.2008-2244 Olivetti Claudia, 2009, 14873 NAT BUR EC RES Baker M, 2008, J HEALTH ECON, V27, P871, DOI 10.1016/j.jhealeco.2008.02.006 McCarter-Spaulding D, 2008, J HUM LACT, V24, P206, DOI 10.1177/0890334408316076 Jacknowitz A, 2008, WOMEN HEALTH, V47, P87, DOI 10.1080/03630240802092357 Wolf JB, 2007, J HEALTH POLIT POLIC, V32, P595, DOI 10.1215/03616878-2007-018 Gatrell CJ, 2007, SOC SCI MED, V65, P393, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2007.03.017 Hausman BL, 2007, NEW LITERARY HIST, V38, P479, DOI 10.1353/nlh.2007.0039 Johnston ML, 2007, JOGNN-J OBST GYN NEO, V36, P9, DOI 10.1111/J.1552-6909.2006.00109.x Huber Joan, 2007, ORIGINS GENDER INEQU Stone P, 2007, OPTING OUT: WHY WOMEN REALLY QUIT CAREERS AND HEAD HOME, P1 Martin Melissa, 2007, BREASTFEEDING WORKPL Ryan AS, 2006, WOMEN HEALTH ISS, V16, P243, DOI 10.1016/j.whi.2006.08.001 Kukla Rebecca, 2006, HYPATIA, V21, P157, DOI 10.2979/HYP.2006.21.1.157 Kimbro RT, 2006, MATERN CHILD HLTH J, V10, P19, DOI 10.1007/s10995-005-0058-7 United States Department of Labor, 2006, NLSY79 US GUID 1979 Spivey C, 2005, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V59, P119 Smith JP, 2005, FEM ECON, V11, P41, DOI 10.1080/1354570042000332605 Luo Y, 2005, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V60, pS93 Khoury AJ, 2005, WOMEN HEALTH ISS, V15, P64, DOI 10.1016/j.whi.2004.09.003 Gartner LM, 2005, PEDIATRICS, V115, P496, DOI 10.1542/peds.2004-2491 Reynolds Janice, 2005, BREASTFEEDING WORKPL Stoel Reinoud D., 2005, ENCY STAT BEHAV SCI, V3, P1296 Frick Kevin D., 2005, REV ECON HOUSEHOLD, V3, P315, DOI 10.1007/s11150-005-3460-4 Arun SV, 2004, FEM ECON, V10, P65, DOI 10.1080/1354570042000198236 Massachusetts Department of Public Health, 2004, BREASTF WORKS MEET N Wolf JH, 2003, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V93, P2000, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.93.12.2000 Haider SJ, 2003, DEMOGRAPHY, V40, P479, DOI 10.2307/1515156 Singer J. D., 2003, APPL LONGITUDINAL DA Hausman B., 2003, MOTHERS MILK BREASTF World Health Organization (WHO), 2003, GLOB INF YOUNG CHILD Ryan AS, 2002, PEDIATRICS, V110, P1103, DOI 10.1542/peds.110.6.1103 Bliese PD, 2002, ORGAN RES METHODS, V5, P362, DOI 10.1177/109442802237116 Wall G, 2001, GENDER SOC, V15, P592, DOI 10.1177/089124301015004006 Budig MJ, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P204, DOI 10.2307/2657415 Schmied V, 2001, SOCIOL HEALTH ILL, V23, P234, DOI 10.1111/1467-9566.00249 Ball TM, 2001, PEDIATR CLIN N AM, V48, P253, DOI 10.1016/S0031-3955(05)70298-4 Nagy E, 2001, ACTA PAEDIATR, V90, P51, DOI 10.1080/080352501750064879 Weimer Jon, 2001, 13 USDA EC RES SERV Law J, 2000, SIGNS, V25, P407, DOI 10.1086/495446 Unites States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), 2000, HLTH BLUEPR ACT BREA Roe B, 1999, DEMOGRAPHY, V36, P157, DOI 10.2307/2648105 Blum L., 1999, BREAST IDEOLOGIES BR Fein SB, 1998, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V88, P1042, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.88.7.1042 Visness CM, 1997, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V87, P945, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.87.6.945 Galtry Judith, 1997, FEMINIST EC, V3, P1, DOI 10.1080/135457097338636 Draper SB, 1996, AM ANTHROPOL, V98, P258, DOI 10.1525/aa.1996.98.2.02a00030 Lindberg LD, 1996, J MARRIAGE FAM, V58, P239, DOI 10.2307/353392 Hays S., 1996, CULTURAL CONTRADICTI COHEN R, 1995, AM J HEALTH PROMOT, V10, P148 Carter P., 1995, FEMINISM BREASTS BRE Baumslag Naomi, 1995, MILK MONEY MADNESS C GIELEN AC, 1991, PEDIATRICS, V87, P298 Hochschild Arlie, 1989, 2 SHIFT WORKING FAM KURINIJ N, 1988, PEDIATRICS, V81, P365 BARBER-MADDEN R, 1987, Journal of Public Health Policy, V8, P531, DOI 10.2307/3342277 Fildes Valerie A., 1986, BREASTS BOTTLES BABI Gerson K, 1985, HARD CHOICES WOMEN D VANESTERIK P, 1981, STUD FAMILY PLANN, V12, P184 MINCER J, 1974, J POLIT ECON, V82, pS76, DOI 10.1086/260293 Noonan Mary C., HLTH CHOICE BREASTFE United States Breastfeeding Committee (USBC), WORKPL SUPP FED LAW NR 69 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD APR PY 2012 VL 77 IS 2 BP 244 EP 267 DI 10.1177/0003122411435477 PG 24 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 916GV UT WOS:000302089500004 ER PT J AU Goldstein, A AF Goldstein, Adam TI Revenge of the Managers: Labor Cost-Cutting and the Paradoxical Resurgence of Managerialism in the Shareholder Value Era, 1984 to 2001 SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE financial capitalism; managerialism; restructuring; shareholder value ID CORPORATE GOVERNANCE; UNITED-STATES; PANEL-DATA; IRON CAGE; DISPLACEMENT; ORGANIZATIONS; ECONOMY; FIRM; COMPENSATION; STRATEGIES AB Institutional changes associated with the rise of shareholder value capitalism have had seemingly contradictory effects on managers and managerialism in the United States economy. Financial critiques of inefficient corporate bureaucracies and the resulting wave of downsizing, mergers, and computerization subjected managers to unprecedented layoffs during the 1980s and 1990s as firms sought to become lean and mean. Yet the proportion of managers and their average compensation continued to increase during this period. How did the rise of anti-managerial investor ideologies and strategies oriented toward reducing companies' labor costs coincide with increasing numbers of ever more highly paid managerial employees? This article examines the paradoxical relationship between shareholder value and managerialism by analyzing the effects of shareholder value strategies on the growth of managerial employment and managerial earnings in 59 major industries in the U.S. private sector from 1984 to 2001. Results from industry-level dynamic panel models show that layoffs, mergers, computerization, deunionization, and the increasing predominance of publicly traded firms all contributed to broad-based increases in the number of managerial positions and the valuation of managerial labor. Results are generally consistent with David Gordon's (1996) fat and mean thesis. C1 Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Sociol, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA. RP Goldstein, A (reprint author), Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Sociol, 410 Barrows Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA EM goldstam@berkeley.edu CR Tomaskovic-Devey D, 2011, AM SOCIOL REV, V76, P538, DOI 10.1177/0003122411414827 Center for Economic and Policy Research, 2011, CPS DISPL WORK UN EX U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2010, CURR EMPL STAT U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2010, CURR POP SURV King Miriam, 2010, CURRENT POPULATION S Dobbin Frank, 2010, MARKETS TRIAL EC SOC, V30, P29 U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, 2010, NAT INC PROD ACC University of California Committee on Planning and Budget, 2010, CHOIC REP Davis G.F., 2009, MANAGED MARKETS FINA Ho K., 2009, LIQUIDATED ETHNOGRAP Burkhauser Richard V., 2008, J ECON SOC MEAS, V33, P89 Standard and Poor's, 2008, COMP N AM DAT Mendenhall Ruby, 2008, SOC FORCES, V87, P187 Osterman Paul, 2008, TRUTH MIDDLE MANAGER Fligstein N, 2007, SOCIOL FORUM, V22, P399, DOI 10.1111/j.1573-7861.2007.00044.x Brookman Jeffrey, 2007, FINANCIAL REV, V42, P99, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-6288.2007.00163.x Tang Zun, 2007, RES SOCIAL STRATIFIC, V25, P273, DOI 10.1016/j.rssm.2007.08.003 Wade JB, 2006, ORGAN SCI, V17, P527, DOI 10.1287/orsc.1060.0204 Osterman P, 2006, AMERICA AT WORK: CHOICES AND CHALLENGES, P193 Bebchuk L, 2005, OXFORD REV ECON POL, V21, P283, DOI 10.1093/oxrep/gri017 Oyer P, 2005, J FINANC ECON, V76, P99, DOI 10.1016/j.jfineco.2004.03.004 Zorn Dirk, 2005, SOCIOLOGY FINANCIAL, P269 Hollister MN, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P659 Littler CR, 2004, ORGAN STUD, V25, P1159, DOI 10.1177/0170840604046314 Zajac EJ, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P433 McCall Leslie, 2004, INEQUALITY EC NEW CO Kalleberg AL, 2003, WORK OCCUPATION, V30, P154, DOI 10.1177/0730888403251683 Baumol William J., 2003, DOWNSIZING AM REALIT Greene W., 2003, ECONOMETRIC ANAL Hirsch BT, 2003, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V56, P349, DOI 10.2307/3590942 Hallock Kevin, 2003, DESCRIPTIVE AN UNPUB Budros A, 2002, SOCIOL FORUM, V17, P307, DOI 10.1023/A:1016093330881 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2002, WORK DISPL 1999 2001 Westphal JD, 2001, ADMIN SCI QUART, V46, P202, DOI 10.2307/2667086 Fligstein N, 2001, ARCHITECTURE MARKETS Meyer Marshall, 2001, SOURCEBOOK LABOR MAR, P449 Kennedy Allan, 2001, END SHAREHOLDER VALU Lazonick W, 2000, ECON SOC, V29, P13 Jacoby Sanford, 2000, CHI KENT L REV, V76, P1195 Cappelli Peter, 2000, JOB IS LONG TERM EMP, P463 Jaffe Jeffrey, 2000, ADV MERGERS ACQUISIT, P7 Wallace M, 1999, SOC SCI RES, V28, P265, DOI 10.1006/ssre.1999.0647 Baron JN, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P527, DOI 10.2307/2657254 Porac JF, 1999, ADMIN SCI QUART, V44, P112, DOI 10.2307/2667033 Kletzer LG, 1998, J ECON PERSPECT, V12, P115 Hall BJ, 1998, Q J ECON, V113, P653, DOI 10.1162/003355398555702 Westphal JD, 1998, ADMIN SCI QUART, V43, P127, DOI 10.2307/2393593 O'Neill HM, 1998, ACAD MANAGE REV, V23, P98, DOI 10.2307/259101 DiNardo John, 1997, NBER WORKING PAPER W, Vw6318 Kalleberg AL, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P47, DOI 10.2307/2096406 Osterman P, 1996, BROKEN LADDERS MANAG Useem M., 1996, INVESTOR CAPITALISM Batt R., 1996, BROKEN LADDERS MANAG, P55 Osterman P., 1996, BROKEN LADDERS MANAG, P81 Scott E. D., 1996, BROKEN LADDERS MANAG, P126 Gordon David, 1996, FAT MEAN CORPORATE S KIVIET JF, 1995, J ECONOMETRICS, V68, P53, DOI 10.1016/0304-4076(94)01643-E GARDNER JM, 1995, MON LABOR REV, V118, P45 DAVIS GF, 1994, ADMIN SCI QUART, V39, P141, DOI 10.2307/2393497 Guillen M. F., 1994, MODELS MANAGEMENT WO Roe Mark J., 1994, STRONG MANAGERS WEAK Useem M., 1993, EXECUTIVE DEFENSE SH CAVES RE, 1993, BROOKINGS PAP ECO AC, P227 Hirsch Paul, 1993, EXPLORATIONS EC SOCI, P145 JACOBS JA, 1992, ADMIN SCI QUART, V37, P282, DOI 10.2307/2393225 CAPPELLI P, 1992, ACAD MANAGE J, V35, P203, DOI 10.2307/256479 ARELLANO M, 1991, REV ECON STUD, V58, P277, DOI 10.2307/2297968 Fligstein N., 1990, TRANSFORMATION CORPO Icahn Carl, 1989, NY TIMES MAGAZI 0129 Jackall Robert, 1988, MORAL MAZES WORLD CO DIMAGGIO PJ, 1983, AM SOCIOL REV, V48, P147, DOI 10.2307/2095101 ROSEN S, 1982, BELL J ECON, V13, P311, DOI 10.2307/3003456 Weber M, 1978, EC SOC OUTLINE INTER MEYER JW, 1977, AM J SOCIOL, V83, P340, DOI 10.1086/226550 Dahrendorf Ralf, 1972, CLASS CLASS CONFLICT Bendix Reinhard, 1956, WORK AUTHORITY IND I Berle A., 1932, MODERN CORPORATION P NR 77 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD APR PY 2012 VL 77 IS 2 BP 268 EP 294 DI 10.1177/0003122412440093 PG 27 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 916GV UT WOS:000302089500005 ER PT J AU Hamm, P King, LP Stuckler, D AF Hamm, Patrick King, Lawrence P. Stuckler, David TI Mass Privatization, State Capacity, and Economic Growth in Post-Communist Countries SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE economic performance; mass privatization; post-communism; state capacity ID TRANSITION ECONOMIES; INITIAL CONDITIONS; CENTRAL-EUROPE; RUSSIA; MARKET; FIRMS; CZECH; TRANSFORMATION; CAPITALISM AB Why did the transition from socialism to capitalism result in improved growth in some countries and significant economic decline in others? Scholars have advanced three main arguments: (1) successful countries rapidly implemented neoliberal policies; (2) failures were not due to policies but to poor institutional environments; and (3) policies were counterproductive because they damaged the state. We present a state-centered theory and empirically demonstrate for the first time one of several possible mechanisms linking neoliberal policies to poor economic performance: mass privatization programs, where implemented, created a massive fiscal shock for post-communist governments, thereby undermining the development of private-sector governance institutions and severely exacerbating the transformational recession. We performed cross-national panel regressions for a sample of 25 post-communist countries between 1990 and 2000 and found that mass privatization programs negatively affected economic growth, state capacity, and property rights protection. We further tested these findings with firm-level data from a representative survey of managers in 3,550 companies operating in 24 post-communist countries. Within countries that implemented mass-privatized programs, newly privatized firms were substantially less likely to engage in industrial restructuring but considerably more likely to use barter and accumulate tax arrears than their state-owned counterparts. C1 [Hamm, Patrick] Harvard Univ, Dept Sociol, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA. [King, Lawrence P.] Univ Cambridge, Dept Sociol, Cambridge CB2 1TN, England. [King, Lawrence P.] Univ Cambridge, Univ Cambridge Emmanuel Coll, Cambridge CB2 1TN, England. RP Hamm, P (reprint author), Harvard Acad Int & Area Studies, Weatherhead Ctr Int Affairs, Room E104,Mailbox 18,1727, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA EM phamm@fas.harvard.edu CR World Bank and EBRD, 2011, TRANSITION Zhandossov Damir, 2011, THESIS U CAMBRIDGE Szentpeteri A, 2010, ECON POLIT-OXFORD, V22, P298, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0343.2009.00364.x Wilk Katarzyna, 2010, OXFORD HDB COMP I AN, P565 King Lawrence, 2009, 199 U MASS POL EC RE Gupta N, 2008, EUR ECON REV, V52, P183, DOI 10.1016/j.euroecorev.2007.05.004 Choucair Farah, 2008, ARAB REFORM B Kessides Joannis, 2008, PRIVATIZATION TRANSI, P9 Nellis John, 2008, PRIVATIZATION TRANSI, P81 World Bank, 2008, WORLD DEV IND DAT Kurtz MJ, 2007, J POLIT, V69, P538 Clemens ES, 2007, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V33, P527, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.33.040406.131700 Popov Vladimir, 2007, COMP EC STUDIES, V49, P1, DOI 10.1057/palgrave.ces.8100182 Hanousek J, 2007, ECON TRANSIT, V15, P1, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0351.2007.00278.x Bennett J, 2007, ECON TRANSIT, V15, P661, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0351.2007.00300.x Knack Stephen, 2007, J PUBLIC POLICY, V27, P255 Ganev Venelin, 2007, PREYING STATE TRANSF Sznajder Aleksandra, 2006, AM J SOCIOL, V12, P751 Fish M. Steven, 2005, DEMOCRACY DERAILED R Reuvid Jonathan, 2005, DOING BUSINESS LITHU Spicer Andrew, 2005, TAKING ACCOUNT ACCOU Arakelyan Vazgen, 2005, THESIS U TAMPERE FIN Szelenyi Ivan, 2005, HDB EC SOCIOLOGY, P206 Block F, 2005, HANDBOOK OF ECONOMIC SOCIOLOGY, SECOND EDITION, P505 Estrin Saul, 2004, 4291 CTR EC POL RES Popov Vladimir, 2004, 342 PONARS King L, 2003, POLIT SOC, V31, P3, DOI 10.1177/0032329202250157 Ellerman David, 2003, CHALLENGE, V46, P6 Djankov S, 2002, J ECON LIT, V40, P739, DOI 10.1257/002205102760273788 King L, 2002, STUD COMP INT DEV, V37, P3, DOI 10.1007/BF02686229 Hanley E, 2002, AM J SOCIOL, V108, P129, DOI 10.1086/342770 Kogut B, 2002, IND CORP CHANGE, V11, P1, DOI 10.1093/icc/11.1.1 Aslund A, 2002, BUILDING CAPITALISM World Bank, 2002, BUILD I MARK Friedman Milton, 2002, EC FREEDOM WORLD 200, pxvii McDermott Gerald, 2002, EMBEDDED POLITICS IN Ickes Barry W., 2002, RUSSIAS VIRTUAL EC Nureev R. M., 2002, VOPROSI EC, V6, P1 Rosefielde S, 2001, EUROPE-ASIA STUD, V53, P1159 de Melo M, 2001, WORLD BANK ECON REV, V15, P1, DOI 10.1093/wber/15.1.1 Fligstein N, 2001, ARCHITECTURE MARKETS Wedel Janine R., 2001, COLLISION COLLUSION Cohen Stephen F., 2001, FAILED CRUSADE AM TR Pivovarsky Alexander, 2001, DOES PRIVATIZATION W King Lawrence P., 2001, BASIC FEATURES POSTC Glinski Dmitri, 2001, RAGEDY RUSSIAS REFOR King Lawrence P., 2001, THEOR SOC, V30, P494 Spicer A, 2000, ACAD MANAGE REV, V25, P630, DOI 10.2307/259315 Nee V, 2000, J INST THEOR ECON, V156, P64 Popov V, 2000, COMP EC STUDIES, V42, P1 King Lawrence P., 2000, EUR J SOCIOL, V41, P189 Klebnikov Paul, 2000, GODFATHER KREMLIN DE Pappe Yakov, 2000, OLIGARCHI EKONOMICHE Medvedev Roy A., 2000, POSTSOVIET RUSSIA JO World Bank and EBRD, 2000, BUS ENV ENT PERF SUR International Monetary Fund (IMF, 2000, WORLD EC OUTL OCT 20 Stiglitz Joseph E., 2000, P WORLD BANK ANN C D Evans P, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P748, DOI 10.2307/2657374 Stuart RC, 1999, POST-SOV GEOGR ECON, V40, P267 Mygind Niels, 1999, 30 CEES COP BUS SCH Woodruff D, 1999, MONEY UNMADE BARTER United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), 1999, TRANS 1999 EUR CIS H Aslund Anders, 1999, ANN WORLD BANK C DEV Townsley Eleanor, 1998, MAKING CAPITALISM CA Vishny Robert W., 1998, GRABBING HAND GOVT P Ellerman David, 1998, 1924 WORLD BANK Lieberman Ira W., 1997, STATE MARKET MASS PR, P1 Bell Stuart, 1997, STATE MARKET MASS PR, P197 Rapaczynski Andrzej, 1997, EC TRANSITION COMP A, P41 Shen Raphael, 1997, RESTRUCTURING ROMANI World Bank, 1997, STAT CHANG WORLD Burawoy M, 1996, WORLD DEV, V24, P1105, DOI 10.1016/0305-750X(96)00022-8 Sachs JD, 1996, AM ECON REV, V86, P128 deMelo M, 1996, POST-SOV GEOGR ECON, V37, P265 Gray Cheryl, 1996, CORPORATE GOVERNANCE Gutsu Vladimir, 1996, EC TRANSITION RUSSIA, P344 Denizer Cevdet, 1996, PLAN MARKET PATTERNS Jermakowicz WW, 1995, RUSS E EUR FINANC TR, V31, P31 WALDER AG, 1995, AM J SOCIOL, V101, P263, DOI 10.1086/230725 SHAFIK N, 1995, WORLD DEV, V23, P1143, DOI 10.1016/0305-750X(95)00037-D Evans P., 1995, EMBEDDED AUTONOMY ST Kornai Janos, 1995, HIGHWAY BYWAYS STUDI Beckett Katherine, 1994, HDB EC SOCIOLOGY, P234 European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), 1994, TRANS REP Sachs Jeffrey, 1994, UNDERSTANDING SHOCK van Reenen John, 1994, 14 EUR BANK REC DEV Summers Lawrence, 1994, TRANSITION E EUROPE, V1, P252 Block Fred, 1994, HDB EC SOCIOLOGY, P691 Boycko Maxim, 1993, POSTCOMMUNIST REFORM STARK D, 1992, E EUR POLIT SOC, V6, P17 BURAWOY M, 1992, AM SOCIOL REV, V57, P16, DOI 10.2307/2096142 Sachs Jeffrey, 1992, ECON PLANN, V25, P5 Kosolowski Rey, 1992, J ECON ISSUES, V26, P673 Sachs Jeffrey, 1992, NEW EUR L REV, V1, P71 MURRELL P, 1992, EMERGENCE OF MARKET ECONOMIES IN EASTERN EUROPE, P35 FISCHER S, 1991, J ECON PERSPECT, V5, P91 Dornbusch Rudiger, 1991, REFORM E EUROPE Kornai Janos, 1990, ROAD FREE EC SHIFTIN Sachs Jeffrey, 1990, BROOKINGS PAPERS EC, V2, P293 Sachs Jeffrey, 1990, BROOKINGS PAP EC ACT, V1, P75 Hill Audrey, 1989, 1917 PERESTROIKA VIC Mann M., 1986, SOURCES SOCIAL POWER Zeitlin Maurice, 1984, CIVIL WARS CHILE BAUER T, 1983, J COMP ECON, V7, P304, DOI 10.1016/0147-5967(83)90100-2 Kornai Janos, 1980, EC SHORTAGE Weber Max, 1978, EC SOC Moore Barrington, 1978, INJUSTICE SOCIAL BAS Weber Max, 1966, GEN EC HIST Weber Max, 1958, M WEBER ESSAYS SOCIO, P77 Weber Max, 1958, M WEBER ESSAYS SOCIO, P196 NR 110 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD APR PY 2012 VL 77 IS 2 BP 295 EP 324 DI 10.1177/0003122412441354 PG 30 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 916GV UT WOS:000302089500006 ER PT J AU Desmond, M AF Desmond, Matthew TI Disposable Ties and the Urban Poor SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID NEIGHBORHOOD POVERTY; AMERICAN FAMILIES; AFRICAN-AMERICAN; KIN NETWORKS; RACE; STRENGTH; MARKETS; SUPPORT; BLACKS AB Sociologists long have observed that the urban poor rely on kinship networks to survive economic destitution. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork among evicted tenants in high-poverty neighborhoods, this article presents a new explanation for urban survival, one that emphasizes the importance of disposable ties formed between strangers. To meet their most pressing needs, evicted families often relied more on new acquaintances than on kin. Disposable ties facilitated the flow of various resources, but often bonds were brittle and fleeting. The strategy of forming, using, and burning disposable ties allowed families caught in desperate situations to make it from one day to the next, but it also bred instability and fostered misgivings among peers. C1 Harvard Univ, Dept Sociol, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA. RP Desmond, M (reprint author), Harvard Univ, Dept Sociol, William James Hall,33 Kirkland St, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA EM mdesmond@fas.harvard.edu CR Desmond Matthew, 2012, AM J SOCIOL IN PRESS Emirbayer M, 2012, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V35, P574 Proctor Bernadette, 2010, CURRENT POPULATION R, P60 Goffman A, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P339 Bourgois P., 2009, RIGHTEOUS DOPEFIEND Small Mario, 2009, UNANTICIPATED GAINS Black Timothy, 2009, HEART TURNS ROCK SOL Wacquant L, 2008, URBAN OUTCASTS COMP Miller-Cribbs JE, 2008, SOC WORK, V53, P43 Steensland Brian, 2008, FAILED WELFARE REVOL Handler JF, 2007, BLAME WELFARE, IGNORE POVERTY AND INEQUALITY, P1 Smith Sandra Susan, 2007, LONE PURSUIT DISTRUS Pleasence Pascoe, 2007, TRANSFORMING LIVES L, P71 Duneier Mitchell, 2007, FOCUS, V25, P33 Heflin CM, 2006, SOC SCI RES, V35, P804, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2004.09.002 Smith RC, 2006, MEXICAN NEW YORK: TRANSNATIONAL LIVES OF NEW IMMIGRANTS, P1 Western Bruce, 2006, PUNISHMENT INEQUALIT Venkatesh Sudhir, 2006, BOOKS UNDERGROUND EC Tilly Charles, 2005, IDENTITIES BOUNDARIE Hamilton Darrick, 2005, INCLUSION AM DREAM A, P87 Briggs Xavier de Souza, 2005, GEOGRAPHY OPPORTUNIT Sarkisian N, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P812 Burt RS, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P349, DOI 10.1086/421787 Shapiro TM, 2004, HIDDEN COST BEING AF Seabright Paul, 2004, CO STRANGERS NATURAL Zuckerman EW, 2003, J ECON LIT, V41, P545, DOI 10.1257/002205103765762761 Dominguez S, 2003, SOC PROBL, V50, P111, DOI 10.1525/sp.2003.50.1.111 Hays S, 2003, FLAT BROKE CHILDREN Hartman C, 2003, HOUS POLICY DEBATE, V14, P461 Heflin CM, 2002, SOCIOL INQ, V72, P220, DOI 10.1111/1475-682X.00014 Venkatesh Sudhir, 2002, ETHNOGRAPHY, V3, P91, DOI 10.1177/1466138102003001004 Forrest R, 2001, URBAN STUD, V38, P2125, DOI 10.1080/00420980120087081 Elliott JR, 2001, SOC PROBL, V48, P341, DOI 10.1525/sp.2001.48.3.341 Massey DS, 2001, URBAN AFF REV, V36, P452, DOI 10.1177/10780870122184957 Flyvbjerg B., 2001, MAKING SOCIAL SCI MA Auyero J., 2001, POOR PEOPLES POLITIC Ehrenreich Barbara, 2001, NICKEL DIMED NOT GET Lopez M. Lisette, 2001, SOCIAL CAPITAL POOR, P31 Lin Nan, 2001, SOCIAL CAPITAL THEOR, P57 Rankin BH, 2000, SOC FORCES, V79, P139, DOI 10.2307/2675567 Levitt SD, 2000, Q J ECON, V115, P755, DOI 10.1162/003355300554908 Brubaker R, 2000, THEOR SOC, V29, P1, DOI 10.1023/A:1007068714468 Menjivar Cecilia, 2000, FRAGMENTED TIES SALV Bourdieu Pierre, 2000, PASCALIAN MEDITATION Nelson M. K., 2000, QUALITATIVE SOCIOLOG, V23, P291, DOI 10.1023/A:1005567910606 Ferligoj A, 1999, SOC NETWORKS, V21, P111, DOI 10.1016/S0378-8733(99)00007-6 Anderson E., 1999, CODE STREET DECENCY Hartigan John, 1999, RACIAL SITUATIONS CL Newman Katherine, 1999, NO SHAME MY GAME WOR Duneier Mitchell, 1999, SIDEWALK Tilly C, 1998, DURABLE INEQUALITY Patterson Orlando, 1998, RITUALS BLOOD CONSEQ Katz J, 1997, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V25, P391, DOI 10.1177/0049124197025004002 Oliver ML, 1997, BLACK WEALTH WHITE W Lein Laura, 1997, MAKING ENDS MEET SIN Jencks Christopher, 1997, MAKING ENDS MEET SIN Roschelle Anne, 1997, NO MORE KIN EXPLORIN Wacquant Loic, 1996, ACTES RECHERCHE SCI, V113, P63, DOI 10.3406/arss.1996.3183 Du Bois W. E. B., 1996, PHILADELPHIA NEGRO S Bourgois P, 1995, SEARCH RESPECT SELLI HOGAN DP, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1428, DOI 10.1086/230194 Goetz Edward, 1993, SHELTER BURDEN LOCAL Smith Adam, 1991, INQUIRY NATURE CAUSE UEHARA E, 1990, AM J SOCIOL, V96, P521, DOI 10.1086/229571 HOGAN DP, 1990, SOC FORCES, V68, P797, DOI 10.2307/2579354 MARSDEN PV, 1990, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V16, P435, DOI 10.1146/annurev.so.16.080190.002251 FREEMAN LC, 1987, AM ANTHROPOL, V89, P310, DOI 10.1525/aa.1987.89.2.02a00020 Wilson W. J., 1987, TRULY DISADVANTAGED MARSDEN PV, 1984, SOC FORCES, V63, P482, DOI 10.2307/2579058 BURT RS, 1984, SOC NETWORKS, V6, P293, DOI 10.1016/0378-8733(84)90007-8 Granovetter M, 1983, SCO, V1, P201 Laumann Edward, 1983, APPL NETWORK ANAL, P18 Gans Herbert, 1982, URBAN VILLAGERS GROU Killworth Peter, 1981, CONNECTIONS, V4, P1 Merry Sally Engle, 1981, URBAN DANGER LIFE NE WELLMAN B, 1979, AM J SOCIOL, V84, P1201, DOI 10.1086/226906 Elias Norbert, 1978, WHAT IS SOCIOLOGY Lomnitz Larissa Adler, 1977, NETWORKS MARGINALITY RUBIN Z, 1975, J EXP SOC PSYCHOL, V11, P233, DOI 10.1016/S0022-1031(75)80025-4 Stack Carol, 1974, ALL OUR KIN STRATEGI Kornblum William, 1974, BLUE COLLAR COMMUNIT Ekeh P., 1974, SOCIAL EXCHANGE THEO GRANOVET.MS, 1973, AM J SOCIOL, V78, P1360, DOI 10.1086/225469 Lofland Lyn, 1973, WORLD STRANGERS ORDE Howell Joseph, 1973, HARD LIVING CLAY STR Simmel Georg, 1971, G SIMMEL INDIVIDUALI, P143 Rainwater Lee, 1970, GHETTO WALLS BLACK F Booth Charles, 1970, LIFE LABOUR PEOPLE L, V17 Suttles Gerald, 1968, SOCIAL ORDER SLUM ET Wirth Louis, 1967, L WIRTH CITIES SOCIA, P60 Liebow Elliot, 1967, TALLYS CORNER STUDY Powdermaker H., 1966, STRANGER FRIEND WAY Cooley Charles Horton, 1964, HUMAN NATURE SOCIAL Durkheim Emile, 1951, SUICIDE STUDY SOCIOL Cayton Horace, 1945, BLACK METROPOLIS STU Whyte William Foote, 1943, STREETCORNER SOC SOC Zorbaugh Harvey, 1929, GOLD COAST SLUM SOCI Engels Friedrich, 1892, CONDITIONS WORKING C NR 98 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD MAR PY 2012 VL 117 IS 5 BP 1295 EP 1335 DI 10.1086/663574 PG 41 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 928EJ UT WOS:000302963900001 ER PT J AU Moon, D AF Moon, Dawne TI Who Am I and Who Are We? Conflicting Narratives of Collective Selfhood in Stigmatized Groups SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID SOCIAL-MOVEMENT ORGANIZATIONS; IDENTITY POLITICS; GAY MOVEMENT AB Identity politics arises out of conditions of systematic stigmatization and structural disadvantage, but sharing a social structural position does not guarantee that people will define themselves and their collectivity in the same way. In fact, because identity politics occupies two major points of tension, it gives rise to several alternative ways of conceptualizing the "we," the collective self. Using ethnographic material gathered on American Jews' understandings of anti-Semitism and its relationship to contemporary politics, this article inductively discerns four alternative models of collective selfhood (embattled, relating, political, and redeemed) that correspond to four alternative narratives of identity politics (reified identity, humanistic dialogue, critical solidarity, and evangelism). These narratives help explain the deep emotions sparked by challenges to people's self-definitions. A comparison to studies of LGBT movements further reveals the utility of this conceptualization and elaborates a model not apparent in the first case. C1 Marquette Univ, Dept Sociol, Milwaukee, WI 53233 USA. RP Moon, D (reprint author), Marquette Univ, Dept Sociol, Milwaukee, WI 53233 USA EM dawne.moon@marquette.edu CR Gould Deborah, 2009, MOVING POLITICS EMOT Just the Facts Coalition, 2008, JUST FACTS SEX OR YO Ghaziani Amin, 2008, DIVIDENDS DISSENT CO Pew Research Center, 2008, PEW FOR REL PUBL LIF Thomas Randy, 2007, MAN MOVED GOD Erzen T, 2006, STRAIGHT TO JESUS: SEXUAL AND CHRISTIAN CONVERSIONS IN THE EX-GAY MOVEMENT, P1 Belzer T, 2006, ABRA DIALOG SER, V5, P103 Bernstein M, 2005, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V31, P47, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.29.010202.100054 Robnett B, 2005, RES SOC MOV CONFL CH, V26, P201, DOI 10.1016/S0163-786X(05)26007-X Rapaport Lynn, 2005, CAMBRIDGE COMPANION, P187, DOI 10.1017/CCOL0521822041.011 Rosenthal Steven T., 2005, CAMBRIDGE COMPANION, P209, DOI 10.1017/CCOL0521822041.012 Woocher Jonathan S., 2005, CAMBRIDGE COMPANION, P284 Moon Dawne, 2004, GOD SEX POLITICS HOM Kimmelman Evelyn, 2004, LETT MOMENT, V29, P20 Foxman Abraham H., 2003, NEVER AGAIN THREAT N Dershowitz Alan, 2003, CASE ISRAEL Chesler Phyllis, 2003, NEW ANTISEMITISM CUR Bernstein M, 2002, SOC SCI HIST, V26, P531, DOI 10.1215/01455532-26-3-531 Armstrong Elizabeth A., 2002, FORGING GAY IDENTITI Polletta Francesca, 2002, FREEDOM IS ENDLESS M Coles Roberta, 2002, SOCIOL REV, V50, P587 Meeks C, 2001, SOCIOL THEOR, V19, P325, DOI 10.1111/0735-2751.00144 Polletta F, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P283, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.27.1.283 Rosenthal Steven T., 2001, IRRECONCILABLE DIFFE United Jewish Communities, 2001, NAT JEW POP SURV 200 Brown Wendy, 2001, POLITICS OUT HIST Brubaker R, 2000, THEOR SOC, V29, P1, DOI 10.1023/A:1007068714468 Collins Patricia Hill, 2000, BLACK FEMINIST THOUG Smith Christian, 2000, DIVIDED FAITH EVANGE Gladwell M., 2000, TIPPING POINT LITTLE Sandoval Chela, 2000, METHODOLOGY OPPRESSE Stryker Sheldon, 2000, SELF IDENTITY SOCIAL Cohen Steven M., 2000, JEW SELF FAMILY COMM Holstein James A., 2000, SELF WE LIVE NARRATI Lichterman P, 1999, THEOR SOC, V28, P101, DOI 10.1023/A:1006954611027 Dillon Michele, 1999, CATHOLIC IDENTITY BA Andriote John-Manuel, 1999, VICTORY DEFERRED AID Minkowitz Donna, 1998, FEROCIOUS ROMANCE WH Biale David, 1998, INSIDER OUTSIDER AM, P1 Lazerwitz Bernard, 1998, JEWISH CHOICES AM JE Bernstein M, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P531, DOI 10.1086/231250 Balser DB, 1997, SOC FORCES, V76, P199, DOI 10.2307/2580323 Gamson J, 1997, GENDER SOC, V11, P178, DOI 10.1177/089124397011002003 Gitlin Todd, 1997, AUDACIOUS DEMOCRACY, P152 Feher Shoshana, 1997, CONT AM RELIG ETHNOG, P25 Jasper James M., 1997, ART MORAL PROTEST CU Berlant Lauren, 1997, QUEEN AM GOES WASHIN Buber Martin, 1996, I THOU Goldberg J. J., 1996, JEWISH POWER INSIDE Mendelsohn Daniel, 1996, NEW YORK MAGAZIN SEP, P24 Seidman Steven, 1996, QUEER THEORY SOCIOLO, P1 Gamson Joshua, 1996, QUEER THEORY SOCIOLO, P395 Whittier Nancy, 1995, FEMINIST GENERATIONS Mansbridge Jane, 1995, FEMINIST ORG HARVEST, P27 Calhoun Craig, 1995, REPERTOIRES CYCLES C, P173 Melucci A., 1995, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS CUL, V4, P41 Taylor Verta, 1995, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS CUL, V4, P163 Nicholson Linda, 1995, SOCIAL POSTMODERNISM, P39, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511520792.003 Prakash Gyan, 1995, SOCIAL POSTMODERNISM, P87, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511520792.005 Appiah Kwame Anthony, 1995, SOCIAL POSTMODERNISM, P103, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511520792.006 Seidman Steven, 1995, SOCIAL POSTMODERNISM, P116, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511520792.007 Brown Wendy, 1995, STATES INJURY POWER Connolly William E., 1995, ETHOS PLURALIZATION SOMERS MR, 1994, THEOR SOC, V23, P605, DOI 10.1007/BF00992905 Roof W. C, 1993, GENERATION SEEKERS S Butler Judith, 1993, BODIES MATTER DISCUR Altman Dennis, 1993, HOMOSEXUAL OPPRESSIO Stein Arlene, 1993, SISTERS SEXPERTS QUE Gamson W. A, 1992, TALKING POLITICS Mohanty Chandra Talpade, 1992, DESTABILIZING THEORY, P74 Taylor V., 1992, FRONTIERS SOCIAL MOV, P104 Morris Aldon D., 1992, FRONTIERS SOCIAL MOV, P351 [Anonymous], 1992, LESBIAN CONNECTI MAR, P8 Morrison Toni, 1992, RACEING JUSTICE ENGE Samuels Shirley, 1992, CULTURE SENTIMENT RA Bourdieu P, 1991, LANGUAGE SYMBOLIC PO Gergen Kenneth J., 1991, SATURATED SELF DILEM Mohanty Chandra Talpade, 1991, 3 WORLD WOMEN POLITI Ellis Marc H., 1990, INNOCENCE REDEMPTION Hirsch Marianne, 1990, CONFLICTS FEMINISM Nicholson Linda, 1990, FEMINISM POSTMODERNI Liebman Charles S., 1990, 2 WORLDS JUDAISM ISR Morris Aldon D., 1990, ANN M AM SOC ASS SAN BOURDIEU P, 1989, SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY, V7, P14, DOI 10.2307/202060 Fuss Diana, 1989, ESSENTIALLY SPEAKING Melucci Alberto, 1989, NOMADS PRESENT Riley Denise, 1988, AM I NAME FEMINISM C EPSTEIN S, 1987, SOCIALIST REV, P9 Roof Wade Clark, 1987, AM MAINLINE RELIG IT Zald Mayer N., 1987, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS ORG Gerber David A., 1986, ANTISEMITISM AM HIST Breitman Richard D., 1986, ANTISEMITISM AM HIST, P167 Woocher Jonathan S., 1986, SACRED SURVIVAL CIVI COHEN JL, 1985, SOC RES, V52, P663 MELUCCI A, 1985, SOC RES, V52, P789 Bellah R.N., 1985, HABITS HEART INDIVID Vance Carole S., 1984, PLEASURE DANGER EXPL Wyman David S., 1984, ABANDONMENT JEWS AM Anderson Benedict, 1983, IMAGINED COMMUNITIES Smith Barbara, 1983, HOME GIRLS BLACK FEM Reagon Bernice Johnson, 1983, HOME GIRLS BLACK FEM, P356 Eisen Arnold M., 1983, CHOSEN PEOPLE AM STU Moraga Cherrie, 1983, THIS BRIDGE CALLED M McAdam Douglas, 1982, POLITICAL PROCESS DE Carby Hazel, 1982, EMPIRE STRIKES BACK, P212 GANS HJ, 1979, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V2, P1 Foucault M, 1978, HIST SEXUALITY Young Allen, 1977, OUT CLOSETS VOICES G, P6 Garfinkel Harold, 1967, STUDIES ETHNOMETHODO Austin John, 1967, DO THINGS WORDS Berger PL, 1966, SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION Goffman E., 1963, STIGMA NOTES MANAGEM Moon Dawne, RELIG EDGE IN PRESS NR 113 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD MAR PY 2012 VL 117 IS 5 BP 1336 EP 1379 DI 10.1086/663327 PG 44 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 928EJ UT WOS:000302963900002 ER PT J AU Menjivar, C Abrego, LJ AF Menjivar, Cecilia Abrego, Leisy J. TI Legal Violence: Immigration Law and the Lives of Central American Immigrants SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID UNITED-STATES; SEGMENTED ASSIMILATION; SAN-FRANCISCO; LOS-ANGELES; MIGRATION; 2ND-GENERATION; GUATEMALAN; SALVADORAN; PHOENIX; WORKERS AB This article analyzes how Central American immigrants in tenuous legal statuses experience current immigration laws. Based on ethnographic observations and over 200 interviews conducted between 1998 and 2010 with immigrants in Los Angeles and Phoenix and individuals in sending communities, this study reveals how the convergence and implementation of immigration and criminal law constitute forms of violence. Drawing on theories of structural and symbolic violence, the authors use the analytic category "legal violence" to capture the normalized but cumulatively injurious effects of the law. The analysis focuses on three central and interrelated areas of immigrants' lives-work, family, and school-to expose how the criminalization of immigrants at the federal, state, and local levels is not only exclusionary but also generates violent effects for individual immigrants and their families, affecting everyday lives and long-term incorporation processes. C1 [Menjivar, Cecilia] Arizona State Univ, Sch Social & Family Dynam, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA. [Abrego, Leisy J.] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA USA. RP Menjivar, C (reprint author), Arizona State Univ, Sch Social & Family Dynam, POB 873701, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA EM men-jivar@asu.edu CR Gonzales RG, 2011, AM SOCIOL REV, V76, P602, DOI 10.1177/0003122411411901 Hagan JM, 2011, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V34, P1374, DOI 10.1080/01419870.2011.575233 Abrego LJ, 2011, LAW SOC REV, V45, P337, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-5893.2011.00435.x Donato KM, 2011, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V37, P529, DOI 10.1146/annurev-soc-081309-150216 Menjivar Cecilia, 2011, ENDURING VIOLENCE LA Mckenzie S, 2011, GLOBAL NETW, V11, P63, DOI 10.1111/j.1471-0374.2011.00307.x Jimenez Tomas R., 2011, PATHWAYS WIN, P3 Kohli Aarti, 2011, SECURE COMMUNITIES N Passel Jeffrey, 2011, UNAUTHORIZED IMMIGRA Gardner Andrew M., 2010, CITY STRANGERS GULF Abrego Leisy, 2010, J ED STUDENTS PLACED, V15, P144 Willen Sarah S., 2010, DEPORTATION REGIME S, P262 Milkman Ruth, 2010, WAGE THEFT WORKPLACE Abrego L, 2009, J MARRIAGE FAM, V71, P1070 Takei I, 2009, HISPANIC J BEHAV SCI, V31, P73, DOI 10.1177/0739986308327960 Passel Jeffrey, 2009, PORTRAIT UNAUTHORIZE Menjivar Cecilia, 2009, GENERATIONS IMMIGRAN Arriero Elisabeth, 2009, ARIZONA REPUBLI 0727 Creno Glen, 2009, ARIZONA REPUBLI 0814 Spener David, 2009, CLANDESTINE CROSSING U.S. Department of Homeland Security, 2009, IMM ENF ACT 2008 ANN Shahani Aarti, 2009, LOCAL DEMOCRACY ICE Tobar Hector, 2009, LOS ANGELES TIM 0804 Finnegan William, 2009, NEW YORKER 0720, P42 Behrens Susan Fitzpatrick, 2009, N AM C LAT AM NEW YO Camayd-Freixas Erik, 2009, POSTVILLE CRIMINALIZ Menjivar C, 2008, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V620, P177, DOI 10.1177/0002716208323020 Abrego L, 2008, LAW SOCIAL INQUIRY, V33, P709, DOI 10.1111/j.1747-4469.2008.00119.x Hagan J, 2008, INT MIGR REV, V42, P64, DOI 10.1111/j.1747-7379.2007.00114.x Kasinitz P., 2008, INHERITING CITY CHIL Preston Julia, 2008, NY TIMES 0711 Varsanyi MW, 2008, ANN ASSOC AM GEOGR, V98, P877, DOI 10.1080/00045600802223341 Abrego Leisy J., 2008, THESIS U CALIFORNIA Borja Elizabeth C., 2008, BRIEF DOCUMENTARY HI Jordan Jessica, 2008, GAINESVILLE TIM 1009 Spener David, 2008, MIGRACION DESARROLLO, V10, P115 Caspa Humberto, 2008, TERROR LATINOBARRIO Chavez Leo R., 2008, LATINOTHREAT CONSTRU Menjivar Cecilia, 2008, LEADING ROGUE STATE, P60 Portillo Suyapa, 2008, 27 INT C LAT AM STUD Okie S, 2007, NEW ENGL J MED, V357, P525, DOI 10.1056/NEJMp078113 McConnell ED, 2007, SOC SCI QUART, V88, P199, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-6237.2007.00454.x Coleman M, 2007, ANTIPODE, V39, P54, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8330.2007.00506.x Massey D. S, 2007, CATEGORICALLY UNEQUA Simon J, 2007, GOVERNING CRIME WAR Holmes SM, 2007, INT MIGR, V45, P39, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-2435.2007.00410.x Hao Lingxin, 2007, COLOR LINES COUNTRY Kanstroom Daniel, 2007, DEPORTATION NATION O Human RightsWatch, 2007, HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH Willen SS, 2007, INT MIGR, V45, P8, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-2435.2007.00409.x Ngai Mae M., 2007, LATINOSTUDIES, V5, P503 Coutin Susan B., 2007, NATIONS EMIGRANTS SH Preston Julia, 2007, NY TIMES 1117 Capps Randy, 2007, PAYING PRICE IMPACT Fortuny Karina, 2007, CHARACTERISTICS UNAU Adler RH, 2006, AM BEHAV SCI, V50, P48, DOI 10.1177/0002764206289654 Menjivar C, 2006, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P999, DOI 10.1086/499509 Stumpf Juliet, 2006, AM U L REV, V56, P367 Inda Jonathan Xavier, 2006, CULTURAL DYNAMICS, V18, P115, DOI 10.1177/0921374006066695 Menjivar Cecilia, 2006, INT J SOCIOL FAM, V32, P223 Abrego Leisy J., 2006, LATINO STUDIES, V4, P212, DOI 10.1057/palgrave.lst.8600200 Portes A, 2005, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V28, P1000, DOI 10.1080/01419870500224117 Massey DS, 2005, INT MIGR REV, V39, P469 de Genova Nicholas, 2005, WORKING BOUNDARIES R Gonzalez Daniel, 2005, ARIZONA REPUBLI 0531, pA1 Miller Teresa, 2005, BC 3 WORLD LJ, V25, P81 PNUD (Programa de las Naciones Unidas para el Desarrollo), 2005, INF DES HUM SALV 200 Wong Carolyn, 2005, LOBBYING INCLUSION R Hammock John, 2005, TESTIMONIOS FAMILIAS Menjivar Cecilia, 2005, STATES KILL LATIN AM Walter N, 2004, SOC SCI MED, V59, P1159, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2003.12.013 Salcido O, 2004, HUM ORGAN, V63, P162 Menjivar C, 2004, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V27, P120, DOI 10.1080/0141987032000147968 Ngai Mae M., 2004, IMPOSSIBLE SUBJECTS RODRIGUEZ N., 2004, J LATINO STUDIES, V2, P328 Bourdieu Pierre, 2004, VIOLENCE WAR PEACE, P272 De Genova N, 2004, LATINO STUDIES, V2, P160, DOI 10.1057/palgrave.lst.8600085 Menjivar C, 2003, SOCIOL RELIG, V64, P21, DOI 10.2307/3712267 Alba R.D., 2003, REMAKING AM MAINSTRE Hirsch JS, 2003, COURTSHIP AFTER MARRIAGE: SEXUALITY AND LOVE IN MEXICAN TRANSNATIONAL FAMILIES, P1 Farmer Paul E., 2003, PATHOLOGIES POWER HL Uriarte Miren, 2003, SALVADORANS GUATEMAL Menjivar C, 2002, INT MIGR REV, V36, P437 De Genova NP, 2002, ANNU REV ANTHROPOL, V31, P419, DOI 10.1146/annurev.anthro.31.040402.085432 Jackman MR, 2002, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V28, P387, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.28.110601.140936 Massey Douglas, 2002, SMOKE MIRRORS MEXICA Cornelius WA, 2001, POPUL DEV REV, V27, P661, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4457.2001.00661.x Portes A., 2001, LEGACIES STORY IMMIG Best Joel, 2001, DAMNED LIES STAT UNT Benjamin Walter, 2001, DECONSTRUCTION READE, P62 Rumbaut Ruben G., 2001, ETHNICITIES CHILDREN Andreas Peter, 2001, GLOBAL HUMAN SMUGGLI, P107 Painter G, 2001, J URBAN ECON, V49, P150, DOI 10.1006/juec.2000.2188 Menjivar Cecilia, 2001, MIGRACIONES INT, V1, P65 Menjivar Cecilia, 2000, FRAGMENTED TIES SALV Kleinman Arthur, 2000, VIOLENCE SUBJECTIVIT, P226 Glassner Barry, 1999, CULTURE FEAR WHY AM Waldinger R., 1998, J ETHN MIGR STUD, V24, P5 Calavita K, 1998, LAW SOC REV, V32, P529, DOI 10.2307/827756 Bourdieu Pierre, 1998, MASCULINE DOMINATION Torres-Rivas Edelberto, 1998, VIOLENCIA SOC TRANSI, P46 Roberts Dorothy, 1997, KILLING BLACK BODY R Espiritu Yen Le, 1997, ASIAN AM WOMEN MEN L Medina Maria Isabel, 1997, GEO MASON L REV, V643, P669 Hekman Susan, 1996, FEMINIST INTERPRETAT Thomas William I., 1996, POLISH PEASANT EUROP Hagan Jacqueline Maria, 1994, DECIDING BE LEGAL MA PORTES A, 1993, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V530, P74, DOI 10.1177/0002716293530001006 Minow Martha, 1993, NARRATIVE VIOLENCE L GANS HJ, 1992, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V15, P173 Taussig Michael, 1992, NERVOUS SYSTEM GALTUNG J, 1990, J PEACE RES, V27, P291, DOI 10.1177/0022343390027003005 CALAVITA K, 1990, LAW SOC REV, V24, P1041, DOI 10.2307/3053618 PORTES A, 1989, INT MIGR REV, V23, P606, DOI 10.2307/2546431 Takaki R, 1989, STRANGERS DIFFERENT SIMON RJ, 1984, INT MIGR REV, V18, P1212, DOI 10.2307/2546079 GUTTMACHER S, 1984, J HEALTH POLIT POLIC, V9, P503, DOI 10.1215/03616878-9-3-503 Piore M. J., 1979, BIRDS PASSAGE MIGRAN Cover Robert, 1975, JUSTICE ACCUSED ANTI Gordon M.M., 1964, ASSIMILATION AM LIFE Park Robert, 1950, RACE CULTURE Menjivar Cecilia, CENTRAL AM IMM UNPUB Auyero Javier, ETHNOGRAPHY IN PRESS Santos Carlos, CASE ARIZON IN PRESS NR 124 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD MAR PY 2012 VL 117 IS 5 BP 1380 EP 1421 DI 10.1086/663575 PG 42 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 928EJ UT WOS:000302963900003 ER PT J AU Raley, S Bianchi, SM Wang, W AF Raley, Sara Bianchi, Suzanne M. Wang, Wendy TI When Do Fathers Care? Mothers' Economic Contribution and Fathers' Involvement in Child Care SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID DIVISION-OF-LABOR; UNITED-STATES; INTACT FAMILIES; WOMENS EARNINGS; HOUSEHOLD WORK; TIME; GENDER; DEPENDENCE; PARENTS; PENALTY AB Previous literature suggests a tenuous link between fathers' care of children and maternal employment and earnings. This study shows that the link is stronger when measures of caregiving capture fathers' increased responsibility for children. The analysis of time diary data from 6,572 married fathers and 7,376 married mothers with children under age 13 indicates that fathers (1) engage in more "solo" care of children when their wives are employed, (2) are more likely to do the kind of child care associated with responsibility for their children when their wives spend more time in the labor market, and (3) participate more in routine care when their wives contribute a greater share of the couple's earnings. In addition, the "father care" to "mother care" ratio rises when mothers contribute a greater share of household earnings. C1 [Raley, Sara] McDaniel Coll, Dept Sociol, Westminster, MD 21157 USA. [Bianchi, Suzanne M.] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA USA. [Wang, Wendy] Pew Res Ctr, Washington, DC USA. RP Raley, S (reprint author), McDaniel Coll, Dept Sociol, 2 Coll Hill, Westminster, MD 21157 USA EM sraley@mcdaniel.edu CR Bianchi SM, 2011, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V638, P21 Schneider D, 2011, J MARRIAGE FAM, V73, P845, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2011.00851.x Sullivan Oriel, 2011, J FAMILY THEORY REV, V3, P1, DOI 10.1111/j.1756-2589.2010.00074.x England Paula, 2011, J FAMILY THEORY REV, V3, P23, DOI 10.1111/j.1756-2589.2010.00077.x Budig MJ, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P705, DOI 10.1177/0003122410381593 Wilde E. T., 2010, 16582 NBER Connelly Rachel, 2010, TIME USE MOTHERS US England Paula, 2010, ANN M POP ASS AM DAL Connelly R, 2009, SOC INDIC RES, V93, P147, DOI 10.1007/s11205-008-9403-8 Cherlin Andrew, 2009, MARRIAGE GO ROUND Riley Melissa Buckmiller, 2009, THESIS U MARYLAND CO Wight Vanessa, 2008, SOC FORCES, V87, P2 Gupta S, 2007, J MARRIAGE FAM, V69, P399, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2007.00373.x Correll SJ, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V112, P1297, DOI 10.1086/511799 Craig L, 2006, GENDER SOC, V20, P259, DOI 10.1177/0891243205285212 Hofferth SL, 2006, DEMOGRAPHY, V43, P53, DOI 10.1353/dem.2006.0006 Bianchi S. M., 2006, CHANGING RHYTHMS AM Abraham KG, 2006, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V70, P676, DOI 10.1093/poq/nfl037 Gupta Sanjiv, 2006, SOC SCI RES, V32, P285 Folbre N, 2005, DEMOGRAPHY, V42, P373, DOI 10.1353/dem.2005.0013 Bianchi SM, 2005, Work, Family, Health, and Well-Being, P21 Evertsson M, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P1272, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00092.x Milkie MA, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P739, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00050.x Sayer LC, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P1, DOI 10.1086/386270 Jacobs J. A., 2004, TIME DIVIDE WORK FAM Budig Michelle J., 2004, FAMILY TIME SOCIAL O, P51 Bittman Michael, 2004, FAMILY TIME SOCIAL O, P133 Bianchi Suzanne M., 2004, SOCIAL INEQUALITY, P189 Bittman M, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P186, DOI 10.1086/378341 Hofferth SL, 2003, J FAM ISSUES, V24, P185, DOI 10.1177/0192513X02250087 Mattingly MJ, 2003, SOC FORCES, V81, P999, DOI 10.1353/sof.2003.0036 Hofferth SL, 2003, J MARRIAGE FAM, V65, P213, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2003.00213.x Presser Harriet B., 2003, WORKING 24 7 EC CHAL Townsend N. W., 2002, PACKAGE DEAL MARRIAG Sandberg JF, 2001, DEMOGRAPHY, V38, P423, DOI 10.2307/3088356 Budig MJ, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P204, DOI 10.2307/2657415 Yeung WJ, 2001, J MARRIAGE FAM, V63, P136, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.00136.x Greenstein TN, 2000, J MARRIAGE FAM, V62, P322, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2000.00322.x Brandon PD, 1999, J FAM ISSUES, V20, P350, DOI 10.1177/019251399020003003 Allen SM, 1999, J MARRIAGE FAM, V61, P199, DOI 10.2307/353894 Robinson John P., 1999, TIME LIFE SURPRISING Casper LM, 1998, DEMOGRAPHY, V35, P243, DOI 10.2307/3004055 Waldfogel J, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P209, DOI 10.2307/2657300 Pleck J. H., 1997, ROLE FATHER CHILD DE, P66 Hays S., 1996, CULTURAL CONTRADICTI Zick Cathleen D., 1996, SOC SCI RES, V25, P1 Brines Julie, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V100, P652 CROUTER AC, 1993, DEV PSYCHOL, V29, P198, DOI 10.1037/0012-1649.29.2.198 Furstenberg Frank F., 1993, CHANGING AM FAMILY P, P193 ISHIIKUNTZ M, 1992, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V35, P629 MARSIGLIO W, 1991, J MARRIAGE FAM, V53, P973, DOI 10.2307/353001 BIERNAT M, 1991, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V60, P844, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.60.6.844 DARLINGFISHER CS, 1990, FAM RELAT, V39, P20, DOI 10.2307/584944 Modell John, 1989, ONES OWN YOUTH ADULT NOCK SL, 1988, SOC FORCES, V67, P59, DOI 10.2307/2579100 CROUTER AC, 1987, DEV PSYCHOL, V23, P431, DOI 10.1037/0012-1649.23.3.431 BARNETT RC, 1987, J MARRIAGE FAM, V49, P29, DOI 10.2307/352667 Lamb Michael E., 1987, FATHERS ROLE CROSS C, P3 HILLER DV, 1986, SOC PROBL, V33, P191, DOI 10.1525/sp.1986.33.3.03a00030 Pleck Joseph H., 1985, WORKING WIVES WORKIN Huber Joan, 1983, SEX STRATIFICATION C GILBERT LA, 1982, FAM RELAT, V31, P261, DOI 10.2307/584405 Russell Graeme, 1982, J SOCIOL, V18, P172, DOI 10.1177/144078338201800204 YOGEV S, 1981, J MARRIAGE FAM, V43, P865, DOI 10.2307/351343 NR 64 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD MAR PY 2012 VL 117 IS 5 BP 1422 EP 1459 DI 10.1086/663354 PG 38 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 928EJ UT WOS:000302963900004 ER PT J AU Rosenfeld, J Kleykamp, M AF Rosenfeld, Jake Kleykamp, Meredith TI Organized Labor and Racial Wage Inequality in the United States SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID BLACK; WHITE; EMPLOYMENT; UNIONS; RACE; EARNINGS; MARKETS; GAP; AMERICA; EROSION AB Why have African-American private-sector unionization rates surpassed those of white workers for decades, and how has private-sector union decline exacerbated black-white wage inequality? Using data from the Current Population Survey (1973-2007), the authors show that African-Americans join unions for protection against discriminatory treatment in nonunion sectors. A model-predicted wage series also shows that, among women, black-white weekly wage gaps would be between 13% and 30% lower if union representation remained at high levels. The effect of deunionization on racial wage inequality for men is less substantial, but without deunionization, weekly wages for black men would be an estimated $49 higher. The results recast organized labor as an institution vital for its economic inclusion of African-American men and women. This study points to the need to move beyond class-based analyses of union decline to an understanding of the gendered role unions once played in mitigating racial inequality. C1 [Rosenfeld, Jake] Univ Washington, Dept Sociol, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. [Kleykamp, Meredith] Univ Maryland, College Pk, MD 20742 USA. RP Rosenfeld, J (reprint author), Univ Washington, Dept Sociol, 211 Savery Hall,Box 353340, Seattle, WA 98195 USA EM jakerose@u.washington.edu CR Booth JE, 2010, BRIT J IND RELAT, V48, P26, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8543.2009.00765.x Jacobs David, 2010, SOC SCI RES, V38, P1059 Rosenfeld J, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P916 Pettit B, 2009, DEMOGRAPHY, V46, P469 Frymer P, 2008, PRINC STUD AM POLIT, P1 Alon S, 2007, WORK OCCUPATION, V34, P369, DOI 10.1177/073088407307247 Davis Katrinell M., 2007, SOC FORCES, V86, P561 Levy Frank S., 2007, 13106 NAT BUR EC RES Isaac L, 2006, AM J SOCIOL, V112, P46, DOI 10.1086/502692 Lemieux T, 2006, AM ECON REV, V96, P461, DOI 10.1257/aer.96.3.461 Hirsch BT, 2004, J LABOR ECON, V22, P689, DOI 10.1086/383112 Blanchflower DG, 2004, J LABOR RES, V25, P383, DOI 10.1007/s12122-004-1022-9 Hirsch BT, 2004, J LABOR RES, V25, P233, DOI 10.1007/s12122-004-1035-4 Neal D, 2004, J POLIT ECON, V112, pS1, DOI 10.1086/379940 Huffman ML, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P902, DOI 10.1086/378928 Lopez Steven Henry, 2004, REORGANIZING RUST BE Stepan-Norris Judith, 2003, LEFT OUT REDS AM IND Isaac L, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P722, DOI 10.2307/3088915 Lichtenstein Nelson, 2002, STATE UNION CENTURY Glenn Evelyn Nakano, 2002, UNEQUAL FREEDOM RACE McCall L, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P520, DOI 10.2307/3088921 Grodsky E, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P542, DOI 10.2307/3088922 Hirsch BT, 2001, MON LABOR REV, V124, P51 Cohen PN, 2001, SOC SCI RES, V30, P146, DOI 10.1006/ssre.2000.0693 Card D, 2001, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V54, P296, DOI 10.2307/2696012 Neumark David, 2001, 8663 NAT BUR EC RES Kalleberg AL, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P256, DOI 10.2307/2657440 Smith RA, 1999, SOCIOL QUART, V40, P367, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1999.tb01725.x Freeman R., 1999, WHAT WORKERS WANT Minchin Timothy J., 1999, HIRING BLACK WORKER Bound John, 1999, LATINAS AFRICAN AM W, P61 Aldridge Delores P., 1999, LATINAS AFRICAN AM, P357 Madrian Brigitte C., 1999, 247 NAT BUR EC RES Brueggemann J, 1998, WORK OCCUPATION, V25, P436, DOI 10.1177/0730888498025004003 Hirsch Barry T., 1998, J HUM RESOUR, V33, P202 Card D, 1996, ECONOMETRICA, V64, P957, DOI 10.2307/2171852 HILL H, 1996, REV AM HIST, V24, P189, DOI 10.1353/rah.1996.0037 ZIPP JF, 1994, SOC PROBL, V41, P363, DOI 10.1525/sp.1994.41.3.03x0444b Card David, 1994, 4755 NAT BUR EC RES KATZNELSON I, 1993, POLIT SCI QUART, V108, P283, DOI 10.2307/2152013 Goldfield Michael, 1993, INT LABOR WORKING CL, V44, P1 BOUND J, 1992, Q J ECON, V107, P201, DOI 10.2307/2118327 ROBINSON C, 1989, J POLIT ECON, V97, P639, DOI 10.1086/261620 OLZAK S, 1989, AM J SOCIOL, V94, P1303, DOI 10.1086/229156 Wilson W. J., 1987, TRULY DISADVANTAGED KAUFMAN RL, 1986, AM SOCIOL REV, V51, P310, DOI 10.2307/2095304 GLENN EN, 1985, REV RADICAL POL ECON, V17, P86, DOI 10.1177/048661348501700306 Freeman RB, 1984, WHAT DO UNIONS DO FREEMAN RB, 1984, J LABOR ECON, V2, P1, DOI 10.1086/298021 Kessler-Harris Alice, 1982, OUT WORK HIST WAGE E BECK EM, 1980, AM J SOCIOL, V85, P791, DOI 10.1086/227089 BONACICH E, 1976, AM SOCIOL REV, V41, P34, DOI 10.2307/2094371 NR 52 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD MAR PY 2012 VL 117 IS 5 BP 1460 EP 1502 DI 10.1086/663673 PG 43 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 928EJ UT WOS:000302963900005 ER PT J AU Flippen, CA AF Flippen, Chenoa A. TI Laboring Underground: The Employment Patterns of Hispanic Immigrant Men in Durham, NC SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE Hispanic; immigration; wages; low-wage labor market; employment relations ID UNITED-STATES; MEXICAN IMMIGRANTS; LEGAL STATUS; MARKET; EARNINGS; MIGRANTS; ECONOMY; WAGES; CONSEQUENCES; ENFORCEMENT AB The dramatic increase in Hispanic immigration to the United States in recent decades has been coterminous with fundamental shifts in the labor market towards heightened flexibility, instability, and informality. As a result, the low-wage labor market is increasingly occupied by Hispanic immigrants, many of whom are undocumented. While numerous studies examine the implications for natives' employment prospects, our understanding of low-wage immigrants themselves remains underdeveloped. Drawing on original data collected in Durham, North Carolina, this article provides a more holistic account of immigrant Hispanic's labor market experiences, examining not only wages but also employment instability and benefit coverage. The analysis evaluates the role of human capital and immigration characteristics, including legal status, in shaping compensation outcomes, as well as the influence of other employment characteristics. Findings highlight the salience of nonstandard work arrangements such as subcontracting and informal employment to the labor market experiences of immigrant Hispanic men, and describe the constellation of risk factors that powerfully bound immigrant employment outcomes. C1 Univ Penn, Dept Sociol, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA. RP Flippen, CA (reprint author), Univ Penn, Dept Sociol, 3718 Locust Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA EM chenoa@sas.upenn.edu CR Gentsch K, 2011, SOC SCI QUART, V92, P875, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-6237.2011.00795.x Passel Jeffrey, 2011, UNAUTHORIZED IMMIGRA Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2011, EMPL STAT FOR BORN N Kalleberg Arne, 2011, GOOD JOBS BAD JOBS R Hall M, 2010, SOC FORCES, V89, P491 Parrado EA, 2010, SOC SCI MED, V70, P1059, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.12.017 Kopczuk W, 2010, Q J ECON, V125, P91 Massey D. S., 2010, NEW FACES NEW PLACES Parrado EA, 2010, SEX CULT HEALTH, P40 Orrenius PM, 2009, J POLICY ANAL MANAG, V28, P239, DOI 10.1002/pam.20425 Donato KM, 2008, WORK OCCUPATION, V35, P462, DOI 10.1177/0730888408322859 Hall M, 2008, DEMOGRAPHY, V45, P619 Hudson K, 2007, SOC SCI RES, V36, P286, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2005.11.005 Capps Randy, 2007, TRENDS LOW WAGE IMMI Parrado EA, 2005, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V34, P204, DOI 10.1177/0049124105280202 Massey DS, 2005, INT MIGR REV, V39, P469 Israel BA, 2005, METHODS COMMUNITY BA Bleakley H, 2004, REV ECON STAT, V86, P481, DOI 10.1162/003465304323031067 Johnson-Webb Karen D., 2003, RECRUITING HISPANIC Kalleberg Arne, 2003, WORK OCCUPATION, V3, P154 Catanzarite L, 2002, SOC PROBL, V49, P101, DOI 10.1525/sp.2002.49.1.101 Hauan SM, 2000, WORK OCCUPATION, V27, P188, DOI 10.1177/0730888400027002004 Kalleberg AL, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P256, DOI 10.2307/2657440 Schneider F, 2000, J ECON LIT, V38, P77, DOI 10.1257/jel.38.1.77 Catanzarite L, 2000, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V43, P45 Phillips JA, 1999, DEMOGRAPHY, V36, P233, DOI 10.2307/2648111 Rivera-Batiz FL, 1999, J POPUL ECON, V12, P91, DOI 10.1007/s001480050092 Enchautegui ME, 1998, POPUL DEV REV, V24, P811, DOI 10.2307/2808027 Ferber MA, 1998, MON LABOR REV, V121, P3 Portes A, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P219, DOI 10.2307/2096332 MASSEY DS, 1995, POPUL DEV REV, V21, P631, DOI 10.2307/2137753 SASSEN S, 1994, YALE LAW J, V103, P2289, DOI 10.2307/797048 DONATO KM, 1993, SOC SCI QUART, V74, P523 Harrison Bennett, 1990, GREAT U TURN CORPORA WATTERS JK, 1989, SOC PROBL, V36, P416, DOI 10.1525/sp.1989.36.4.03a00070 KOSSOUDJI SA, 1988, J LABOR ECON, V6, P205, DOI 10.1086/298181 PORTES A, 1987, AM J SOCIOL, V93, P30, DOI 10.1086/228705 MASSEY DS, 1987, INT MIGR REV, V21, P236, DOI 10.2307/2546315 CHISWICK BR, 1984, INT MIGR REV, V18, P714, DOI 10.2307/2545894 ZUCKER LG, 1981, AM SOCIOL REV, V46, P869, DOI 10.2307/2095084 Piore Michael J., 1970, STATE POOR, P55 Flippen Chenoa A., CITY COMMUNITY NR 42 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD FEB PY 2012 VL 59 IS 1 BP 21 EP 42 DI 10.1525/sp.2012.59.1.21 PG 22 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 890DM UT WOS:000300125300003 ER PT J AU McCammon, HJ AF McCammon, Holly J. TI Explaining Frame Variation: More Moderate and Radical Demands for Women's Citizenship in the U.S. Women's Jury Movements SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE social movements; women rights; legal rights; framing; juries ID COLLECTIVE ACTION FRAMES; ENVIRONMENTAL MOVEMENT; SUFFRAGE MOVEMENTS; SOCIAL-MOVEMENTS; ABORTION DEBATE; PEACE MOVEMENT; UNITED-STATES; ORGANIZATIONS; RESOURCES; DYNAMICS AB While social movement scholars have added immeasurably to our knowledge of activist framing, few researchers analyze the circumstances leading to variation in the frames articulated by movement actors. In this study, 1 explore an important and understudied form of frame variation, whether activists use more moderate or more radical frames. Using framing data from the early twentieth-century U.S. women's jury movements, I first show that activists offered both a more traditional and moderate difference frame, arguing that women should be permitted on juries because they would provide a unique female perspective in jury deliberations, and a more radical equality frame, stating that women had an equal right to sit on juries and they were as intellectually capable as men to do so. Second, I demonstrate that a combination of circumstances explains whether the jury activists were likely to articulate more moderate or more radical arguments. I find that frame variation is driven by activist organizational identities, a cultural and political resonance process, and a counterframing process. Findings from multinomial and binary logistic regression analyses reveal that all three processes influenced jury activist framing. C1 Vanderbilt Univ, Dept Sociol, Nashville, TN 37235 USA. RP McCammon, HJ (reprint author), Vanderbilt Univ, Dept Sociol, Box 351811, Nashville, TN 37235 USA EM holly.mccammon@vanderbilt.edu CR Hox J. J., 2010, MULTILEVEL ANAL TECH GIVAN RK, 2010, DIFFUSION SOCIAL MOV Stobaugh James E., 2010, DIFFUSION SOCIAL MOV, P34 Banaszak Lee Ann, 2010, WOMENS MOVEMENT INSI McCammon HJ, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P1104, DOI 10.1086/522805 Adams Katherine H., 2008, A PAUL AM SUFFRAGE C Dodd Lynda G., 2008, J LAW POLITICS, V24, P339 Downey DJ, 2008, RES SOC MOV CONFL CH, V28, P3, DOI 10.1016/S0163-786X(08)28001-8 Snow DA, 2007, SOC FORCES, V86, P385 Burstein P, 2007, SOCIOL FORUM, V22, P174, DOI 10.1111/j.1573-7861.2007.00012.x Hallgrimsdottir HK, 2006, SOCIOL QUART, V47, P521, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.2006.00057.x Haines HH, 2006, SOCIOL INQ, V76, P231, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2006.00153.x Maney GM, 2005, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V48, P357, DOI 10.1525/sop.2005.48.3.357 Polletta F, 2005, MOBILIZATION, V10, P271 SNIJDERS TAB, 2005, ENCY STAT BEHAV SCI, V3, P1570 McCammon HJ, 2004, SOCIOL QUART, V45, P529, DOI 10.1525/tsq.2004.45.3.529 Broad KL, 2004, SOCIOL QUART, V45, P509, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.2004.tb02301.x Esacove AW, 2004, SOCIOL INQ, V74, P70, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2004.00080.x Jasper James, 2004, MOBILIZATION, V9, P1 Dugan K., 2004, SOCIOL FOCUS, V37, P213 Snow David A, 2004, BLACKWELL COMPANION, P380, DOI 10.1002/9780470999103.ch17 Donovan Josephine, 2004, FEMINIST THEORY INTE Johnson Joan Marie, 2004, SO LADIES NEW WOMEN Rucht Dieter, 2004, BLACKWELL COMPANION, P197, DOI 10.1002/9780470999103.ch9 Dalton RJ, 2003, COMP POLIT STUD, V36, P743, DOI 10.1177/0010414003255108 Croteau D, 2003, SOC PROBL, V50, P251, DOI 10.1525/sp.2003.50.2.251 Benford Robert D, 2003, CHALLENGES CHOICES C, P153 Carmin J, 2002, ORGAN ENVIRON, V15, P365, DOI 10.1177/1086026602238167 Rohlinger DA, 2002, SOCIOL QUART, V43, P479, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.2002.tb00063.x Westby David L., 2002, MOBILIZATION, V7, P287 Butler Amy E., 2002, 2 PATHS EQUALITY A P Perry EI, 2001, NEW YORK HIST, V82, P53 McCammon HJ, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P49, DOI 10.2307/2657393 McCaffrey D, 2000, SOCIOL QUART, V41, P41, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.2000.tb02365.x Ritter G, 2000, POLITY, V32, P345, DOI 10.2307/3235356 Benford RD, 2000, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V26, P611, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.26.1.611 Ganz M, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P1003, DOI 10.1086/210398 Gilligan Maureen Carol, 1999, FEMALE CORPORATE CUL Kubal TJ, 1998, SOCIOL QUART, V39, P539, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1998.tb00517.x Soule SA, 1997, SOC FORCES, V75, P855, DOI 10.2307/2580522 Bernstein Mary, 1997, SOCIOLOGY, V103, P531 Reese E, 1996, GENDER SOC, V10, P566, DOI 10.1177/089124396010005005 Coy PG, 1996, SOCIOL SPECTRUM, V16, P287 Cox Elizabeth M., 1996, WOMEN STATE TERRITOR Zald M. N, 1996, COMP PERSPECTIVES SO, P261 Andersen Kristi, 1996, SUFFRAGE WOMEN PARTI NOONAN RK, 1995, SOCIOL FORUM, V10, P81, DOI 10.1007/BF02098565 WILLIAMS RH, 1995, SOC PROBL, V42, P124, DOI 10.1525/sp.1995.42.1.03x0458p Stevens Betty, 1995, DANGEROUS CLASS HIST MEYER DS, 1994, SOC PROBL, V41, P277, DOI 10.1525/sp.1994.41.2.03x0438v Thomas Sue, 1994, WOMEN LEGISLATE Burrell Barbara, 1994, WOMANS PLACE IS HOUS Hunt S., 1994, NEW SOCIAL MOVEMENTS, P185 Thompson Ruth Anne, 1994, THESIS VANDERBILT U KOOPMANS R, 1993, AM SOCIOL REV, V58, P637, DOI 10.2307/2096279 BENFORD RD, 1993, SOC FORCES, V71, P677, DOI 10.2307/2579890 CLEMENS ES, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P755, DOI 10.1086/230089 ACKER J, 1992, CONTEMP SOCIOL, V21, P565, DOI 10.2307/2075528 Taylor V., 1992, FRONTIERS SOCIAL MOV, P104 Bock Gisela, 1992, EQUALITY DIFFERENCE Dodson Debra L., 1991, RESHAPING AGENDA WOM JAGGAR AM, 1990, THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES ON SEXUAL DIFFERENCE, P239 Tarrow S., 1989, DEMOCRACY DISORDER P Young Louise M., 1989, PUBLIC INTEREST LEAG OFFEN K, 1988, SIGNS, V14, P119, DOI 10.1086/494494 Snow David A., 1988, INT SOCIAL MOVEMENT, V1, P197 Strauss A. L., 1987, QUALITATIVE ANAL SOC Benford Robert D., 1987, THESIS U TEXAS AUSTI DOWNEY GL, 1986, SOC PROBL, V33, P357, DOI 10.1525/sp.1986.33.5.03a00020 BARKAN SE, 1986, SOCIOL INQ, V56, P190, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.1986.tb00083.x Schur E. M., 1983, LABELING WOMEN DEVIA MCADAM D, 1983, AM SOCIOL REV, V48, P735, DOI 10.2307/2095322 Becker Susan D, 1981, ORIGINS EQUAL RIGHTS Krippendorff K., 1980, CONTENT ANAL INTRO I Shankman Arnold, 1980, S CAROLINA HIST MAGA, V81, P102 Ambrosini Linda L., 1980, THESIS CALIFORNIA ST [Anonymous], 1976, STAT ABSTR Gamson William, 1975, STRATEGY SOCIAL PROT U.S. Bureau of the Census, 1975, HIST STAT US COL TIM Lemons J. Stanley, 1973, WOMAN CITIZEN SOCIAL Scott AnneFiror, 1970, SO LADY PEDESTAL POL University of North Texas, 1954, JUR SERV WOM TEX [Anonymous], 1953, ATLANTA J 0115 [Anonymous], 1953, STAT ABSTR Turner Margaret, 1952, ATLANTA J 1123 [Anonymous], 1950, TENNESSEAN 0607, P10 [Anonymous], 1949, MEMPHIS PRESS S 0218, P10 Smith Eudochia Bell, 1945, THEY ASK ME WHY National Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs, 1944, HIST NAT FED BUS PRO University of Colorado-Boulder, 1944, RAD SCRIPT Denver Public Library, 1943, BUS PROF WOM CLUBS R S. Bureau of the Census, 1942, STAT ABSTR [Anonymous], 1941, BURLINGTON FREE 0206, P3 [Anonymous], 1939, RUTLAND DAILY H 0215, P2 Columbia University, 1937, COMMUNICATION 0202 O'Dell Ruth, 1937, TENNESSEE BUSINESS P, V8, P1 O'Dell Ruth, 1937, TENNESSEE BUSINESS P, V8, P6 McLaughlin Kathleen, 1937, NY TIMES 0131, P6 Georgia Archives, 1937, WOM JUR URG MISS KIN, V1 [Anonymous], 1935, NY TIMES 0327, P23 Lutz Alma, 1934, EQUAL RIGHTS, V20, P46 [Anonymous], 1931, BALTIMORE SUN 0226, P24 U. S. Bureau of the Census, 1931, STAT ABSTR [Anonymous], 1930, BOSTON HERALD 0115 University of Missouri-St. Louis, 1929, COMMUNICATION 0422 Putnam Mabel Raef, 1924, WINNING 1 BELL RIGHT La Follette G. E., 1923, HELENA INDEPEND 0221, P1 La Follette G. E., 1923, HELENA INDEPEND 0221, P10 Schlesinger Library, 1923, JL BARR PAP U. S. Bureau of the Census, 1921, STAT ABSTR [Anonymous], 1921, WASHINGTON POST 1229, P3 California Historical Society, 1916, COMMUNICATION 0128 U.S. Bureau of the Census, 1913, STAT ABSTR McGammon Holly J., MORE JUST V IN PRESS NR 114 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD FEB PY 2012 VL 59 IS 1 BP 43 EP 69 DI 10.1525/sp.2012.59.1.43 PG 27 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 890DM UT WOS:000300125300004 ER PT J AU Bowen, S Gaytan, MS AF Bowen, Sarah Gaytan, Marie Sarita TI The Paradox of Protection: National Identity, Global Commodity Chains, and the Tequila Industry SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE Tequila; Mexico; national identity; global commodity chains; culture ID GEOGRAPHICAL INDICATIONS; NEOLIBERALISM; MEXICO; TERROIR; FOOD; GLOBALIZATION; CITIZENSHIP; MOVEMENTS; DEMOCRACY; NETWORKS AB Nations and nationalism remain relevant even in the context of increased global integration. At the same time, as commodity chains become longer, more transnational, and increasingly complex, the linkages between national identity, global capitalism, and political and economic elites are evolving. In this article, we show how culture-expressed in terms of national attachment and collective heritage-is a key means by which elites assert their power along global commodity chains. Specifically, we use the tequila commodity chain as a lens for analyzing how notions of patrimony, and the attendant reliance on the language of shared collective experience, are mobilized to forward corporate agendas in the global marketplace. Focusing on the interplay between global processes and local responses, we argue that the Mexican state and tequila companies promote notions of nationalness at the expense of the agave farmers, small-scale distillers, and communities where tequila is produced. We show how three central themes are part of this process: the protection of place, the maintenance of quality, and the defense of national interests. This article illustrates how new forms of national attachments are emerging under globalization by integrating an analysis of culture into commodity chain research. C1 [Bowen, Sarah] N Carolina State Univ, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA. [Gaytan, Marie Sarita] Univ Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA. RP Bowen, S (reprint author), Campus Box 8107, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA EM sarah_bowen@ncsu.edu CR Sheppard R, 2011, NATIONS NATL, V17, P500, DOI 10.1111/j.1469-8129.2010.00472.x McCracken Jeffrey, 2011, BLOOMBERG NEWS 0525 Consejo Regulador del Tequila (CRT), 2011, CONS DIR Shefner Jon, 2011, J WORLD SYSTEMS RES, V17, P353 Consejo Estatal de Poblacion de Jalisco, 2011, POBR INGR Consejo Regulador del Tequila (CRT), 2011, PREC SERV Consejo Regulador del Tequila (CRT), 2011, MARC ENV EXTR Consejo Regulador del Tequila (CRT), 2011, MARC ENV NAC Distilled Spirits Council, 2011, US TEQ MARK GLANC 20 DeSoucey M, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P432, DOI 10.1177/0003122410372226 Bowen S, 2010, RURAL SOCIOL, V75, P209, DOI 10.1111/j.1549-0831.2009.00007.x O'Toole Gavin, 2010, REINVENTION MEXICO N Bowen Sarah, 2010, NSF SPONS WORKSH MAR Camara Nacional de la Industria Tequilera (CNIT), 2010, TEQ TOP 10 BRANDS WO Camara Nacional de la Industria Tequilera (CNIT), 2010, INF EST 2010 Secretaria de Agricultura Ganaderia Desarrollo Rural Pesca y Alimentacion (SAGARPA), 2010, CIERR PROD AGR DISTR Secretaria de Agricultura Ganaderia Desarrollo Rural Pesca y Alimentacion (SAGARPA), 2010, CIERR PROD AGR EST 2 Schurman R, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P155 Bowen S, 2009, J RURAL STUD, V25, P108, DOI 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2008.07.003 Macias Macias Alejandro, 2009, COMERCIO EXTERIOR, V59, P459 Inter-American Development Bank (IADB), 2009, TEQ TRAIL VIS MEX SO McMichael P., 2008, DEV SOCIAL CHANGE GL Bair J, 2008, ECON SOC, V37, P339, DOI 10.1080/03085140802172664 Berard Laurence, 2008, LOCALIZED PRODUCTS G Camara Nacional de la Industria Tequilera (CNIT), 2008, COMP IND 2008 Gaytan Marie Santa, 2008, THESIS U CALIFORNIA Mundo Cuervo, 2008, WHAT IS MUND CUERV Secretaria de Tourismo (SECTUR), 2008, PUEBL MAG Bowen S, 2007, AGR HUM VALUES, V24, P473, DOI 10.1007/s10460-007-9088-7 Woods M, 2007, PROG HUM GEOG, V31, P485, DOI 10.1177/0309132507079503 Dicken P, 2007, GLOBAL SHIFT MAPPING De Janvry Alain, 2007, J AGR DEV EC, V4, P66 Camara Nacional de la Industria Tequilera (CNIT), 2007, INF EST 2007 Distilled Spirits Council, 2007, 2007 IND REV Leclert Lucie, 2007, THESIS WAGENINGEN U Mulholland Mary-Lee, 2007, THESIS YORK U TORONT Beck Ulrich, 2006, COSMOPOLITAN VISION [Anonymous], 2006, MURAL 0713 Casas Rosalba, 2006, TECHNOL SOC, V28, P407, DOI 10.1016/j.techsoc.2006.06.007 Ponte S, 2005, ECON SOC, V34, P1, DOI 10.1080/0308514042000329315 Martin PM, 2005, ENVIRON PLANN A, V37, P203, DOI 10.1068/a3737 Radcliffe SA, 2005, ENVIRON PLANN A, V37, P323, DOI 10.1068/a37407 Harvey David, 2005, BRIEF HIST NEOLIBERA BAIR J, 2005, COMPETITION CHANGE, V9, P153, DOI 10.1179/102452905X45382 Scheinman Marc, 2005, BUSINESS MEXICO Friedland W. H., 2005, Cross-continental food chains, P25 Perreault Thomas, 2005, PLANNING, V37, P263 Consejo Regulador del Tequila (CRT), 2005, GACETA, V5, P4 Valenzuela Zapata Ana, 2005, THESIS U AUTONOMA NU Salas Fernando, 2005, 282 WORLD BANK Secretaria de Agricultura Ganaderia Desarrollo Rural Pesca y Alimentacion (SAGARPA), 2005, CIERR PROD AGR DISTR Secretaria de Agricultura Ganaderia Desarrollo Rural Pesca y Alimentacion (SAGARPA), 2005, CIERR PROD AGR EST 2 Gade DW, 2004, ANN ASSOC AM GEOGR, V94, P848 Schrank A, 2004, SOC FORCES, V83, P123, DOI 10.1353/sof.2004.0126 Bandy J, 2004, SOC PROBL, V51, P410, DOI 10.1525/sp.2004.51.3.410 Raynolds LT, 2004, WORLD DEV, V32, P725, DOI 10.1016/j.worlddev.2003.11.008 Kastelein Barbara, 2004, UNIVERSAL HERAL 0424 Garcia Octavio, 2004, GACETA, V4, P8 Consejo Regulador del Tequila (CRT), 2004, GACETA, V4, P18 Talbot J. M, 2004, GROUNDS AGREEMENT PO Otero Gerardo, 2004, MEXICO TRANSITION NE Gomez Arriola Ignacio, 2004, AGAVE LANDSCAPE ANCI Barham E, 2003, J RURAL STUD, V19, P127, DOI 10.1016/S0743-0167(02)00052-9 Robinson WI, 2003, TRANSNATIONAL CONFLI Collins Jane Lou, 2003, THREADS GENDER LABOR O'Toole Gavin, 2003, B LATIN AM RES, V22, P269, DOI 10.1111/1470-9856.00078 Croucher Sheila, 2003, INT STUDIES REV, V5, P1 Fourcade-Gourinchas M, 2002, AM J SOCIOL, V108, P533 Goodman D, 2002, SOCIOL RURALIS, V42, P5, DOI 10.1111/1467-9523.00199 Sklair Leslie, 2002, GLOBALIZATION CAPITA Lewis J., 2002, Journal of Agrarian Change, V2, P401, DOI 10.1111/1471-0366.00040 Clark Andrew, 2002, GUARDIAN 0206 Williams Gareth, 2002, OTHER SIDE POPULAR N Belletti Giovanni, 2002, 3 WP DOLPHINS Gonzalez Marco Antonio, 2002, THESIS U OXFORD OXFO Bair J, 2001, WORLD DEV, V29, P1885, DOI 10.1016/S0305-750X(01)00075-4 Lomnitz Claudio, 2001, DEEP MEXICO SILENT M Dicken P., 2001, GLOBAL NETW, V1, P89, DOI 10.1111/1471-0374.00007 Macias Macias Alejandro, 2001, AGROALIMENTARIA, V6, P57 Babb Sarah, 2001, MANAGING MEXICO EC N Levy Daniel C., 2001, MEXICO STRUGGLE DEMO Joseph Gilbert, 2001, MEXICO READER HIST C Benjamin Thomas, 2000, REVOLUCION MEXICOS G Limon Enrique Martinez, 2000, TEQUILA SPIRIT MEXIC Secretaria de Agricultura Ganaderia Desarrollo Rural Pesca y Alimentacion (SAGARPA), 2000, CIERR PROD AGR EST 2 La Porta R, 1999, Q J ECON, V114, P1193, DOI 10.1162/003355399556250 Monsivais Carlos, 1999, TEQUILA SPIRIT MEXIC, P13 Secretaria de Agricultura Ganaderia Desarrollo Rural Pesca y Alimentacion (SAGARPA), 1999, CIERR PROD AGR DISTR Yashar DJ, 1998, COMP POLIT, V31, P23, DOI 10.2307/422104 Lustig Nora, 1998, MEXICO REMAKING EC Torres Gabriel, 1998, FUTURE ROLE EJIDO RU, P73 Shibata T., 2002, OFFICIAL J EUROPEAN, Patent No. 6416803B1 Appadurai A, 1996, MODERNITY LARGE CULT Muria Jose Maria, 1995, TEQUILA ARTE TRADITI, P17 Hobsbawm Eric, 1995, NATL READER, P362 Gereffi G., 1994, COMMODITY CHAINS GLO Soysal Y, 1994, LIMITS CITIZENSHIP Rabach Eileen, 1994, COMMODITY CHAINS GLO, P123 Goldfrank Walter, 1994, COMMODITY CHAINS GLO, P267 Appelbaum Richard, 1994, GLOBAL PRODUCTION AP, P42 North American Free Trade Agreement Annex 313, 1994, DISTINCTIVE PRODUCTS SOMERS MR, 1993, AM SOCIOL REV, V58, P587, DOI 10.2307/2096277 FRIEDMANN H, 1993, NEW LEFT REV, P29 Brubaker Rogers, 1992, CITIZENSHIP NATIONHO Luna Zamora Rogelio, 1991, HIST TEQUILA SUS REG Porter M., 1990, COMPETITIVE ADV NATI Hobsbawm Eric, 1990, NATIONS NATL 1980 Wallerstein Immanuel, 1987, SOCIOLOGICAL FORUM, V2, P373, DOI 10.1007/BF01124170 Hopkins T.K., 1986, REVIEW, V10, P157 Friedland W.H, 1984, RES RURAL SOCIOLOGY, P221 BENJAMIN T, 1984, HISPANIC AM HIST REV, V64, P323, DOI 10.2307/2514524 Lauret Frederic, 1983, EC SOC CAHIERS ISMEA, V17, P721 Hamilton Nora, 1982, LIMITS STATE AUTONOM NR 113 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD FEB PY 2012 VL 59 IS 1 BP 70 EP 93 DI 10.1525/sp.2012.59.1.70 PG 24 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 890DM UT WOS:000300125300005 ER PT J AU Jaffee, D AF Jaffee, Daniel TI Weak Coffee: Certification and Co-Optation in the Fair Trade Movement SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE social movements; co-optation; certification; fair trade; coffee ID ANTI-BIOTECH MOVEMENT; ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE; FOREST CERTIFICATION; SOCIAL-MOVEMENTS; MARKET; GLOBALIZATION; LABOR; STANDARDS; QUALITY; JUSTICE AB The sociological literature on social movement organizations (SMOs) has come to recognize that under neoliberal globalization many SMOs have moved from an emphasis on the state as the locus of change toward a focus on corporations as targets. This shift has led some SMOs to turn to forms of market-based private regulatory action. The use of one such tactic-voluntary, third-party product certification-has grown substantially, as SMOs seek ways to hold stateless firms accountable. This article explores the case of the international fair trade movement, which aims to change the inequitable terms of global trade in commodities for small farmers, artisans, and waged laborers. Drawing from interviews with a range of fair trade participants, document analysis, and media coverage, the article describes fair trade's growing relationship with multinational coffee firms, particularly Starbucks and Nestle. It explores intra-movement conflicts over the terms for and the effects of corporate participation in fair trade, and illuminates tensions between conceptualizations of fair trade as movement, market, and system: The article makes two arguments. First, while fair trade has succeeded partially in reembedding market exchange within systems of social and moral relations, it has also proved susceptible to the power of corporate actors to disembed the alternative through a process of movement co-optation. Second, it argues that co-optation takes a unique form in the context of social movements whose principal tools to achieve social change are certification and labeling: it occurs primarily on the terrain of standards, in the form of weakening or dilution. C1 Washington State Univ, Dept Sociol, Vancouver, WA 98686 USA. RP Jaffee, D (reprint author), Washington State Univ, Dept Sociol, 14204 NE Salmon Creek Ave, Vancouver, WA 98686 USA EM jaffee@wsu.edu CR Bartley Tim, 2012, HDB POLITICS REGULAT, P441 Fair Trade USA, 2011, 2010 ALM Fairtrade Labeling Organizations (FLO), 2011, FACT SHEET FAIRTR CO Fairtrade Labeling Organizations (FLO), 2011, FAIRTR RESP ANN FAIR Schurman R, 2010, FIGHTING FOR THE FUTURE OF FOOD: ACTIVISTS VERSUS AGRIBUSINESS IN THE STRUGGLE OVER BIOTECHNOLOGY, P1 Jaffee D, 2010, J BUS ETHICS, V92, P267, DOI 10.1007/s10551-010-0583-1 Renard MC, 2010, J BUS ETHICS, V92, P287, DOI 10.1007/s10551-010-0584-0 Bacon CM, 2010, J PEASANT STUD, V37, P111, DOI 10.1080/03066150903498796 International Labor Rights Forum, 2010, REG FLO NEW STAND FR Conroy Michael E., 2010, LAT AM STUD ASS LASA Equal Exchange, 2010, WHY EQ EXCH NOW US I Fair World Project, 2010, FAIR WORLD PROJ FAIR Fairtrade Labeling Organizations (FLO), 2010, GROW STRONG TOG ANN ICE Futures, 2010, COFF C KC FUT NEW YO Raynolds Laura T., 2010, LAT AM STUD ASS LASA Rosenthal Jonathan, 2010, FAIR TRAD FUT C BOST Starbucks Coffee, 2010, STARB GLOB RESP REP Weber K, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P106 Howard P. H., 2009, International Journal of Sociology of Agriculture and Food, V16, P13 REED D, 2009, J BUS ETHICS S, V86, P3 Frundt Henry J., 2009, FAIR BANANAS FARMERS [Anonymous], 2009, PACKER 1024 Bahra Parminder, 2009, TIMES 0108 Fairtrade Labeling Organizations (FLO), 2009, FAIRTR LEAD WAY FAIR Tropical Commodity Coalition, 2009, COFF BAR 2009 Trumpy AJ, 2008, SOC PROBL, V55, P480, DOI 10.1525/sp.2008.55.4.480 Seidman G, 2008, DEV CHANGE, V39, P991, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-7660.2008.00525.x Brown S, 2008, GEOFORUM, V39, P1184, DOI 10.1016/j.geoforum.2007.01.002 FRIDELL M, 2008, REV RADICAL POL ECON, V40, P8 Goigoi Palavi, 2008, BUSINESS WEEK 0618 North Rodney, 2008, FAIR TRADE FIG LEAVE Bartley T, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P297, DOI 10.1086/518871 Thompson CJ, 2007, J CONSUM RES, V34, P135, DOI 10.1086/519143 Bartley T, 2007, SOC PROBL, V54, P229, DOI 10.1525/sp.2007.54.3.229 Guthman J, 2007, ANTIPODE, V39, P456, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8330.2007.00535.x Jaffee D, 2007, BREWING JUSTICE: FAIR TRADE COFFEE, SUSTAINABILITY, AND SURVIVAL, P1 Fridell G, 2007, FAIR TRADE COFFEE PR Seidman Gay, 2007, BOYCOTT LABOR RIGHTS Rigby Dan, 2007, CAPITALISM NATURE SO, V18, P81, DOI 10.1080/10455750701526393 McMichael Philip, 2007, DEV SOCIAL CHANGE Raynolds L. T., 2007, Fair trade: the challenges of transforming globalization, P33 Fridell G, 2007, HIST MATER, V15, P79, DOI 10.1163/156920607X245841 Vidal John, 2007, GUARDIAN 0226 Turner Mandy, 2007, J CORPORATE CITIZENS, V26, P85 Mutersbaugh T, 2005, ENVIRON PLANN A, V37, P2033, DOI 10.1068/a37369 Renard MC, 2005, J RURAL STUD, V21, P419, DOI 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2005.09.002 Klooster D, 2005, J RURAL STUD, V21, P403, DOI 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2005.08.005 Taylor PL, 2005, J RURAL STUD, V21, P433, DOI 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2005.08.002 Mutersbaugh T, 2005, J RURAL STUD, V21, P389, DOI 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2005.08.003 Gereffi G, 2005, REV INT POLIT ECON, V12, P78, DOI 10.1080/09692290500049805 Taylor PL, 2005, WORLD DEV, V33, P129, DOI 10.1016/j.worlddev.2004.07.007 Cab M., 2005, REVALUING PEASANT CO Busch L, 2004, RURAL SOCIOL, V69, P321, DOI 10.1526/0036011041730527 Schurman R, 2004, SOC PROBL, V51, P243, DOI 10.1525/sp.2004.51.2.243 Guthman J, 2004, CAL STUD CRIT HUM GE, V11, P1 Gulbrandsen L. H., 2004, GLOBAL ENVIRON POLIT, V4, P75, DOI 10.1162/152638004323074200 Van Dyke N, 2004, RES SOC MOV CONFL CH, V25, P27, DOI 10.1016/S0163-786X(04)25002-9 Talbot J. M, 2004, GROUNDS AGREEMENT PO Hudson Mark, 2004, SOCIAL JUSTICE, V31, P130 Oxfam International, 2004, NESTL PROF 2003 Renard MC, 2003, J RURAL STUD, V19, P87, DOI 10.1016/S0743-0167(02)00051-7 Collins Jane Lou, 2003, THREADS GENDER LABOR Raynolds LT, 2002, SOCIOL RURALIS, V42, P404, DOI 10.1111/1467-9523.00224 Ponte S, 2002, WORLD DEV, V30, P1099, DOI 10.1016/S0305-750X(02)00032-3 Barham E., 2002, Agriculture and Human Values, V19, P349, DOI 10.1023/A:1021152403919 Sklair Leslie, 2002, GLOBALIZATION CAPITA Oxfam America, 2002, MUGG POV YOUR COFF C Pellow DN, 2001, SOCIOL QUART, V42, P47, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.2001.tb02374.x Campbell D., 2001, Agriculture and Human Values, V18, P353, DOI 10.1023/A:1015210215751 Fung Archon, 2001, CAN WE PUT END SWEAT Charveriat Celine, 2001, BITTER COFFEE POOR A Starbucks, 2001, CORP SOC RESP ANN RE Allen P., 2000, Agriculture and Human Values, V17, P221, DOI 10.1023/A:1007640506965 Raynolds L. T., 2000, Agriculture and Human Values, V17, P297, DOI 10.1023/A:1007608805843 McMichael P., 2000, Agriculture and Human Values, V17, P21, DOI 10.1023/A:1007684827140 James Deborah, 2000, NACLA REPORT AM, V34, P11 Beneria L, 1999, FEM ECON, V5, P61, DOI 10.1080/135457099337815 Renard MC, 1999, SOCIOL RURALIS, V39, P484, DOI 10.1111/1467-9523.00120 Renard Marie Christine, 1999, INTERSTICIOS GLOBALI Klein Naomi, 1999, NO LOGO STANDING BRA McMichael P, 1996, RURAL SOCIOL, V61, P25 Sassen S., 1996, LOSING CONTROL SOVER McAdam D., 1996, COMP PERSPECTIVES SO GOODMAN D, 1994, J PEASANT STUD, V22, P1, DOI 10.1080/03066159408438565 Gereffi G., 1994, COMMODITY CHAINS GLO Friedland William H., 1994, COLUMBUS CONAGRA GLO, P210 FRIEDMANN H, 1994, FOOD SYST AGRAR CH, P258 Brown Michael Barratt, 1993, FAIR TRADE REFORM RE Burawoy M, 1991, ETHNOGRAPHY UNBOUND Block F., 1990, POSTINDUSTRIAL POSSI Gamson Howard, 1975, STRATEGY SOCIAL PROT DORWARD DC, 1974, J AFR HIST, V15, P457 Gamson Howard, 1968, POWER DISCONTENT Selznick P, 1948, AM SOCIOL REV, V13, P25, DOI 10.2307/2086752 Polanyi K, 1944, GREAT TRANSFORMATION NR 95 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD FEB PY 2012 VL 59 IS 1 BP 94 EP 116 DI 10.1525/sp.2012.59.1.94 PG 23 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 890DM UT WOS:000300125300006 ER PT J AU Semyonov, M Gorodzeisky, A Glikman, A AF Semyonov, Moshe Gorodzeisky, Anastasia Glikman, Anya TI Neighborhood Ethnic Composition and Resident Perceptions of Safety in European Countries SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE ethnic composition; neighborhood safety; Europe; fear of crime; immigration ID RACIAL COMPOSITION; COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE; MINORITY POPULATIONS; WESTERN-EUROPE; PERCEIVED RISK; UNITED-STATES; DUTCH CITIES; PUBLIC VIEWS; GROUP THREAT; CRIME AB Employing data from the 2002 European Social Survey for 21 national representative samples, we provide the first cross-national analysis of the relations between ethnic composition of neighborhood and perception of neighborhood safety in the European context. The data reveal considerable variation both across countries and across individuals in perceived safety. Bi-level regression analysis shows that perceived safety tends to be lower in countries characterized by a high imprisonment rate and among Europeans who are physically and socially vulnerable (e.g., among women and elderly people, and among populations of low income and low education). Net of individual-level and country-level attributes, the analysis shows that perceived safety is lowest in neighborhoods mostly populated by non-European ethnic minorities and highest in neighborhoods mostly populated by Europeans. The effect of ethnic composition of neighborhood on perceived safety holds even after controlling for previous personal exposure to crime and views toward minorities' impact on crime. We discuss the results in comparison to findings in the United States and in the light of theory in order to delineate the ways that views and perceptions about places are formed and shaped. C1 [Semyonov, Moshe] Tel Aviv Univ, Dept Sociol, IL-69978 Tel Aviv, Israel. [Semyonov, Moshe] Univ Illinois, Chicago, IL USA. [Gorodzeisky, Anastasia] Ben Gurion Univ Negev, IL-84105 Beer Sheva, Israel. RP Semyonov, M (reprint author), Tel Aviv Univ, Dept Sociol, POB 39040, IL-69978 Tel Aviv, Israel EM moshes@post.tau.ac.il CR Ceobanu AM, 2011, INT J COMP SOCIOL, V52, P114, DOI 10.1177/0020715210377154 Gray E, 2011, BRIT J CRIMINOL, V51, P75, DOI 10.1093/bjc/azq066 Hummelsheim Dina, 2011, EUROPEAN SOCIOLOGICA, V3, P327 Wight RG, 2010, J AGING HEALTH, V22, P197, DOI 10.1177/0898264309355980 Solivetti Luigi M., 2010, IMMIGRATION SOCIAL I Walton E, 2009, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V50, P427 Jackson J, 2009, BRIT J SOCIOL, V60, P493, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-4446.2009.01253.x Ousey GC, 2009, SOC PROBL, V56, P447, DOI 10.1525/sp.2009.56.3.447 Reese Bobby, 2009, INT J SOCIOLOGY, V39, P62 Eurostat, 2009, STAT FOC CRIM CRIM J Messina A, 2009, WEST EUR POLIT, V32, P1, DOI 10.1080/01402380802507580 Eitle D, 2008, SOC SCI RES, V37, P1102, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2008.05.005 Tseloni A, 2008, EUR J CRIMINOL, V5, P387, DOI 10.1177/1477370808095123 Gray E, 2008, EUR J CRIMINOL, V5, P363, DOI 10.1177/1477370808090834 Semyonov M, 2008, INT J COMP SOCIOL, V49, P5, DOI 10.1177/0020715207088585 OECD, 2008, OECD FACTB 2008 van Dijk Jan, 2008, CRIMINAL VICTIMIZATI Semyonov M, 2007, SOC PROBL, V54, P434, DOI 10.1525/sp.2007.54.4.434 Stults BJ, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P507, DOI 10.1086/518906 Ewing Walter A., 2007, MYTH IMMIGRANT CRIMI Thomson M, 2007, J ETHN MIGR STUD, V33, P1025, DOI 10.1080/13691830701541556 Logan JR, 2006, INT J URBAN REGIONAL, V30, P485, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-2427.2006.00677.x Semyonov M, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P426 Karsten S, 2006, EDUC URBAN SOC, V38, P228, DOI 10.1177/0013124505282606 Alba R, 2005, SOC FORCES, V84, P901, DOI 10.1353/sof.2006.0002 Whitley R, 2005, SOC SCI MED, V61, P1678, DOI 10.1016/j.socsimed.2005.03.044 Sutton RM, 2005, BRIT J CRIMINOL, V45, P212, DOI 10.1093/bjc/azh084 Musterd S, 2005, J URBAN AFF, V27, P331, DOI 10.1111/j.0735-2166.2005.00239.x De Donder Liesbeth, 2005, AGEING INT, V30, P363 Peach Ceri, 2005, DESEGREGATING CITY G, P31 Semyonov M, 2004, SOC SCI RES, V33, P681, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2003.11.003 Jackson J, 2004, BRIT J CRIMINOL, V44, P946, DOI 10.1093/bjc/azh048 Malheiros JM, 2004, J ETHN MIGR STUD, V30, P1065, DOI 10.1080/1369183042000286250 Sutton JR, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P170 Lahav G, 2004, IMMIGRATION POLITICS Coenders M., 2004, NATL EXCLUSION MIGRA, P97 Nieuwbeerta Paul, 2004, CRIME VICTIMIZATION Calavita K, 2003, PUNISHM SOC, V5, P399, DOI 10.1177/14624745030054002 Gallagher CA, 2003, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V46, P381, DOI 10.1525/sop.2003.46.3.381 Jowell R., 2003, EUROPEAN SOCIAL SURV Council of Europe, 2003, EUR SOURC CRIM CRIM European Opinion Research Group, 2003, PUBL SAF EXP DRUG RE Scheepers P, 2002, EUR SOCIOL REV, V18, P17, DOI 10.1093/esr/18.1.17 Hartung Halard, 2002, EUROBAROMETER 53 RAC Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD), 2002, TRENDS INT MIGR Quillian L, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P717, DOI 10.1086/338938 Chiricos T, 2001, SOC PROBL, V48, P322, DOI 10.1525/sp.2001.48.3.322 Mears DP, 2001, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V44, P1, DOI 10.1525/sop.2001.44.1.1 Sigelman L, 2001, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V65, P86 Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD), 2001, TRENDS INT MIGR Pain R, 2000, PROG HUM GEOG, V24, P365, DOI 10.1191/030913200701540474 Van Kesteren JN, 2000, CRIMINAL VICTIMISATI Collins CA, 1999, SOCIOL FORUM, V14, P495, DOI 10.1023/A:1021403820451 Harris DR, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P461, DOI 10.2307/2657496 van Kempen R, 1998, URBAN STUD, V35, P1813, DOI 10.1080/0042098984169 Taylor MC, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P512, DOI 10.2307/2657265 Pettigrew TF, 1998, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V24, P77, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.24.1.77 Musterd Sako, 1998, MULTIETHNIC METROPOL Peach C, 1997, SOC SCI QUART, V78, P269 Chiricos T, 1997, CRIMINOLOGY, V35, P107, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.1997.tb00872.x Tonry Michael H, 1997, ETHNICITY CRIME IMMI Yeager Matthew G., 1997, CRIM JUST ABSTR, V29, P143 Mayhew Pat, 1997, CRIMINAL VICTIMISATI Rountree PW, 1996, SOC FORCES, V74, P1353, DOI 10.2307/2580354 QUILLIAN L, 1995, AM SOCIOL REV, V60, P586, DOI 10.2307/2096296 TAYLOR RB, 1995, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V539, P28, DOI 10.1177/0002716295539001003 PETERSON RD, 1993, SOC FORCES, V71, P1001, DOI 10.2307/2580128 Denton Nancy A., 1993, AM APARTHEID SEGREGA Bursik Jr. R. J., 1993, NEIGHBORHOODS CRIME Miller Mark J., 1993, AGE MIGRATION INT PO THOMPSON CY, 1992, DEVIANT BEHAV, V13, P373 Reif Karlheinz, 1992, EUROBAROMETER 30 IMM Skogan W. G, 1990, DISORDER DECLINE CRI FOSSETT MA, 1989, SOC SCI QUART, V70, P820 MOELLER GL, 1989, SOCIOL INQ, V59, P208, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.1989.tb00101.x POORTINGA YH, 1989, INT J PSYCHOL, V24, P737, DOI 10.1080/00207598908247842 LISKA AE, 1982, SOC FORCES, V60, P760, DOI 10.2307/2578391 TOSELAND RW, 1982, J CRIM JUST, V10, P199, DOI 10.1016/0047-2352(82)90040-X Stinchcombe Arthur, 1980, CRIME PUNISHMENT CHA Blalock H., 1967, THEORY MINORITY GROU BLUMER H, 1958, PAC SOCIOL REV, V1, P3 NR 81 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD FEB PY 2012 VL 59 IS 1 BP 117 EP 135 DI 10.1525/sp.2012.59.1.117 PG 19 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 890DM UT WOS:000300125300007 ER PT J AU Meyer, DS Rohlinger, DA AF Meyer, David S. Rohlinger, Deana A. TI Big Books and Social Movements: A Myth of Ideas and Social Change SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE social movements; myth; books; narrative; culture; reputation, collective memory ID WORLD-WAR-II; PUBLIC-POLICY; MEMORY; RESOURCES; VETERANS; ABEYANCE; POLITICS; DEBATE; MEDIA; STATE AB Explanations of the past both :VIM and influence the way we think about the present and future. Like artists and politicians, social movements develop a "reputation" that includes a capsule history of a movement's origins, goals, and impact. Both popular narratives and scholarly treatments identify four books published in the early 19605 as having spurred important social movements and government action. This "big book myth" provides a simple origins story for social movements, a version of an "immaculate conception" notion of social change. We compare the mythic accounts of feminist, environmental, anti-poverty, and consumer movements of the 1960s to fuller histories of these movements and find consistent distortions in the common big book narratives. Mythic accounts shorten the incubation time of social movements and omit the initiating efforts of government and political organizations. The myths develop and persist because they allow interested actors to package and contain a movement's origins, explicitly suggesting that broad social dynamics replicate idealized individual conversion stories. They also allow actors to edit out complicated histories that could compromise the legitimacy of a movement or a set of policy reforms. These mythic accounts spread and persist because they simplify complicated social processes and offer analogues to the individual process of becoming active, but they may lead us to misunderstand the past and make misjudgments about collective action and social change in the future. We consider those implications and call for more research on the construction of myths about the past. C1 [Meyer, David S.] Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Sociol, Irvine, CA 92697 USA. [Rohlinger, Deana A.] Florida State Univ, Dept Sociol, Tallahassee, FL 32306 USA. RP Meyer, DS (reprint author), Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Sociol, Irvine, CA 92697 USA EM dmeyer@uci.edu; drohling@mailer.fsu.edu CR Coontz Stephanie, 2011, STRANGE STIRRING FEM Menand Louis, 2011, NEW YORKER 0124 Heath C., 2007, MADE STICK WHY SOME Meyer David S., 2007, PERSPECTIVES POLITIC, V5, P81 Armstrong EA, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P724 Meyer DS, 2006, MOBILIZATION, V11, P201 Polletta Francesca, 2006, IT WAS LIKE FEVER ST Hansen Jim, 2006, NEW YORK REV BO 0706 Rohlinger Deana, 2006, PUBLIC SOCIOLOGIES, P123 Audia PG, 2005, CALIF MANAGE REV, V48, P6 Frickel S, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P204 Somers MR, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P260 Murphy Priscilla Coit, 2005, WHAT BOOK CAN DO PUB Martelle Scott, 2005, LOS ANGELES TIM 0830 Nojeim M. J., 2004, GANDHI KING POWER NO Snow David A, 2004, BLACKWELL COMPANION, P380, DOI 10.1002/9780470999103.ch17 Aristotle, 2004, RHETORIC Roscigno Vincent J., 2004, VOICE SO LABOR RADIO Ferree MM, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P304, DOI 10.1086/378343 Skocpol Theda, 2003, MEMBERSHIP MANAGEMEN Tilly Charles, 2003, STORIES IDENTITIES P Rohlinger DA, 2002, SOCIOL QUART, V43, P479, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.2002.tb00063.x Mettler S, 2002, AM POLIT SCI REV, V96, P351 Bromberg M, 2002, SOC FORCES, V80, P1135, DOI 10.1353/sof.2002.0023 Campbell JL, 2002, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V28, P21, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.28.110601.141111 Benford Robert D, 2002, STORIES CHANGE NARRA, P53 Blee Kathleen, 2002, INSIDE ORG RACISM WO Kroll G, 2001, PUBLIC UNDERST SCI, V10, P403, DOI 10.1088/0963-6625/10/4/304 Czech B, 2001, ECOL ECON, V39, P3, DOI 10.1016/S0921-8009(01)00196-3 Hoffman AJ, 2001, ORGAN SCI, V12, P414, DOI 10.1287/orsc.12.4.414.10639 Fine G. A, 2001, DIFFICULT REPUTATION Camic Charles, 2001, BLACKWELL COMPANION, P236 Isserman Maurice, 2000, AM DIVIDED CIVIL WAR Fine GA, 1999, SOC PROBL, V46, P225, DOI 10.1525/sp.1999.46.2.03x0187e Sawyers TM, 1999, SOC PROBL, V46, P187, DOI 10.1525/sp.1999.46.2.03x0185c Goodwin J, 1999, SOCIOL FORUM, V14, P27, DOI 10.1023/A:1021684610881 Klatch Rebecca E., 1999, GEN DIVIDED NEW LEFT Hennessee Judith Adler, 1999, B FRIEDAN HER LIFE Glickman L., 1999, CONSUMER SOC AM HIST Brownmiller Susan, 1999, OUT TIME MEMOIR REVO Berry Jeffrey, 1999, NEW LIBERALISM RISIN Berkeley Kathleen, 1999, WOMENS LIBERATION MO Polletta F, 1998, SOC SCI HIST, V22, P479, DOI 10.2307/1171573 Polletta F, 1998, SOC PROBL, V45, P137, DOI 10.1525/sp.1998.45.2.03x0163g Rochon T. R., 1998, CULTURE MOVES IDEAS Meyer D., 1998, SOCIAL MOVEMENT SOC Keck Margaret, 1998, ACTIVISTS BORDERS AD GORNICK JC, 1998, J POLICY HIST, V10, P367 Horowitz Daniel, 1998, B FRIEDAN MAKING FEM Voss Kim, 1998, CHALLENGING AUTHORIT, P136 Lott Jr. John R., 1998, MORE GUNS LESS CRIME Stone D. A, 1997, POLICY PARADOX ART P Brobeck Stephen, 1997, ENCY CONSUMER MOVEME McQuiston Liz, 1997, SUFFRAGETTES SHE DEV Schwartz B, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P908, DOI 10.2307/2096461 Fine GA, 1996, AM J SOCIOL, V101, P1159, DOI 10.1086/230820 WILLIAMS RH, 1995, SOC PROBL, V42, P124, DOI 10.1525/sp.1995.42.1.03x0458p Johnston H., 1995, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS CUL, P127 Minkoff Debra C., 1995, ORG EQUALITY Matthews Nancy A., 1994, CONFRONTING RAPE FEM GRIFFIN LJ, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1094, DOI 10.1086/230140 Baumgartner Frank R., 1993, AGENDAS INSTABILITY Shabecoff Phillip, 1993, FIERCE GREEN FIRE AM BENFORD RD, 1993, SOCIOL QUART, V34, P195, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1993.tb00387.x HAAS PM, 1992, INT ORGAN, V46, P1 Gamson W. A, 1992, TALKING POLITICS Benford Robert, 1992, FRONTIERS SOCIAL MOV, P133 Dunlap Riley, 1992, AM ENV US ENV MOVEME, P1 Costain Anne N., 1992, INVITING WOMENS REBE Jasper James M., 1992, ANIMAL RIGHTS CRUSAD WAGNERPACIFICI R, 1991, AM J SOCIOL, V97, P376, DOI 10.1086/229783 SCHWARTZ B, 1991, AM SOCIOL REV, V56, P221, DOI 10.2307/2095781 Lemann Nicholas, 1991, PROMISED LAND GREAT Kozol J., 1991, SAVAGE INEQUALITIES Castro Ginette, 1990, AM FEMINISM CONT HIS TAYLOR V, 1989, AM SOCIOL REV, V54, P761, DOI 10.2307/2117752 Katz M, 1989, UNDESERVING POOR WAR QUADAGNO J, 1989, POLIT SOC, V17, P353, DOI 10.1177/003232928901700303 Mayer Robert, 1989, CONSUMER MOVEMENT GU HILGARTNER S, 1988, AM J SOCIOL, V94, P53, DOI 10.1086/228951 Edelman M., 1988, CONSTRUCTING POLITIC Kozol Jonathan, 1988, RACHEL HER CHILDREN Rupp Lelia J., 1987, SURVIVAL DOLDRUMS AM MORRIS ALDON D., 1984, ORIGINS CIVIL RIGHTS Murray C., 1984, LOSING GROUND Lash Jonathan, 1984, SEASON SPOILS REAGAN Edsall Thomas Byrne, 1984, NEW POLITICS INEQUAL Zarefsky David, 1980, PRESIDENT JOHNSONS W Ingram Helen M., 1980, WHY POLICIES SUCCEED, P11 Evans Sara, 1979, PERSONAL POLITICS RO MCCARTHY JD, 1977, AM J SOCIOL, V82, P1212, DOI 10.1086/226464 Singer P., 1977, ANIMAL LIBERATION Friedan Betty, 1976, IT CHANGED MY LIFE W Brownmiller S, 1975, OUR WILL MEN WOMEN R Freeman Jo, 1975, POLITICS WOMENS LIBE Rothman David, 1972, THEIR OWN POOR MODER Nadel Mark, 1971, POLITICS CONSUMER PR KOZOL J, 1967, DEATH EARLY AGE DEST Nader R., 1965, UNSAFE ANY SPEED DES Friedan B., 1963, FEMININE MYSTIQUE Mitford Jessica, 1963, AM WAY DEATH Macdonald Dwight, 1963, NEW YORKER 0119, P82 Carson R., 1962, SILENT SPRING Harrington Michael, 1962, OTHER AM POVERTY US Sinclair U, 1906, JUNGLE Stowe Harriet Beecher, 1852, UNCLE TOMS CABIN NR 106 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD FEB PY 2012 VL 59 IS 1 BP 136 EP 153 DI 10.1525/sp.2012.59.1.136 PG 18 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 890DM UT WOS:000300125300008 ER PT J AU Parker, JN Hackett, EJ AF Parker, John N. Hackett, Edward J. TI Hot Spots and Hot Moments in Scientific Collaborations and Social Movements SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE collaboration; emotions; science; skepticism; social movements ID RESILIENCE; SCIENCE AB Emotions are essential but little understood components of research; they catalyze and sustain creative scientific work and fuel the scientific and intellectual social movements (SIMs) that propel scientific change. Adopting a micro-sociological focus, we examine how emotions shape two intellectual processes central to all scientific work: conceiving creative ideas and managing skepticism. We illustrate these processes through a longitudinal study of the Resilience Alliance, a tightly networked coherent group collaborating at the center of a burgeoning scientific social movement in the environmental sciences. We show how emotions structured and were structured by the group's growth and development, and how socio-emotive processes facilitated the rapid production of highly creative science and helped overcome skepticism by outsiders. Hot spots and hot moments-that is, brief but intense periods of collaboration undertaken in remote and isolated settings-fueled the group's scientific performance and drove the SIM. Paradoxically, however, the same socio-emotive processes that ignited and sustained creative scientific research also made skepticism more likely to occur and more difficult to manage. Similarly, emotions and social bonding were essential for the group's growth and development, but increased size and diversity have the potential to erode the affective culture that generated initial successes. C1 [Parker, John N.] Arizona State Univ, Barrett Honors Coll, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA. [Hackett, Edward J.] Arizona State Univ, Sch Human Evolut & Social Change, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA. [Parker, John N.] Univ Calif Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 USA. RP Parker, JN (reprint author), Arizona State Univ, Honors Coll, POB 871612, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA EM john.parker@asu.edu CR Hackett EJ, 2011, LEADERSHIP SCI TECHN, P165 Parker JN, 2010, COLLABORATION NEW LI Parker JK, 2010, ACS SYM SER, V1042, P85 Lamont M, 2009, PROFESSORS THINK INS Arthur Mikaila Mariel Lemonik, 2009, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS STU, V8, P73 Carpenter SR, 2008, ECOL SOC, V13 Isaac L, 2008, SOC FORCES, V87, P33 Lorimer J, 2008, SOC STUD SCI, V38, P377, DOI 10.1177/0306312707084396 Shapin Steven, 2008, SCI LIFE MORAL HIST Olson G. M., 2008, SCI COLLABORATION IN Hackett E.J., 2008, SCI COLLABORATION IN, P277 Sawyer K, 2007, GROUP GENIUS CREATIV Folke C, 2006, GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG, V16, P253, DOI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2006.04.002 Schurman R, 2006, THEOR SOC, V35, P1, DOI 10.1007/s11186-006-6779-9 Sternberg R. J., 1977, HOT THOUGHT MECH APP Hackett EJ, 2005, SOC STUD SCI, V35, P787, DOI 10.1177/030612705056045 Frickel S, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P204 McCammon HJ, 2004, SOCIOL QUART, V45, P529, DOI 10.1525/tsq.2004.45.3.529 Collins Randall, 2004, INTERACTION RITUAL C Jasper James, 2004, MOBILIZATION, V9, P1 Petit RJ, 2003, SCIENCE, V300, P1563, DOI 10.1126/science.1083264 Hermanowicz JC, 2003, SOC STUD SCI, V33, P45, DOI 10.1177/0306312703033001177 Goodwin Jeff, 2003, RETHINKING SOCIAL MO Holling Crawford S., 2002, PANARCHY UNDERSTANDI Bloch Charlotte, 2002, EMOTIONS SOCIOLOGY, P113 Barbalet Jack, 2002, EMOTIONS SOCIOLOGY, P132 Hook Ernest B., 2002, PREMATURITY SCI DISC Scheffer M, 2001, NATURE, V413, P591, DOI 10.1038/35098000 Durkheim E., 2001, ELEMENTARY FORMS REL Farrell M. P., 2001, COLLABORATIVE CIRCLE Stahl F W, 2001, Biogr Mem Natl Acad Sci, V80, P142 Farrell M P, 2001, J Interprof Care, V15, P281 Gunderson LH, 2000, ANNU REV ECOL SYST, V31, P425, DOI 10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.31.1.425 GOODWIN J, 2000, MOBILIZATION, V5, P65 Oliver P., 2001, MOBILIZATION, V5, P37 Gieryn T.F, 1999, CULTURAL BOUNDARIES Knorr Cetina K., 1999, EPISTEMIC CULTURES S Rochon T., 1998, CULTURE MOVES Collins Randall, 1998, SOCIOLOGY PHILOS Hermanowicz Joseph, 1998, STARS ARE NOT ENOUGH Csikszentmihalyi M., 1996, CREATIVITY FLOW PSYC Pickett S. T. A., 1995, P261 SCHEFF TJ, 1995, CRIME LAW SOCIAL CH, V23, P157, DOI 10.1007/BF01298529 GOLDEN GY, 1994, SOC STUD SCI, V24, P463, DOI 10.1177/030631279402400302 Gitlin T, 1993, 60 YEARS HOPE DAYS R De Mey Marc, 1992, COGNITIVE PARADIGM I Chubin D. E., 1990, PEERLESS SCI PEER RE SCHEFF TJ, 1988, AM SOCIOL REV, V53, P395, DOI 10.2307/2095647 Collins H. M., 1985, CHANGING ORDER REPLI Rutwick Martin, 1985, GREAT DEVONIAN CONTR Keller E. F., 1983, FEELING ORGANISM LIF Fleck Ludwik, 1979, GENESIS DEV SCI FACT Kuhn T., 1977, ESSENTIAL TENSION SE Johnson John M., 1975, DOING FIELD RES MITROFF II, 1974, AM SOCIOL REV, V39, P579, DOI 10.2307/2094423 Holling C.S., 1973, Annual Rev Ecol Syst, V4, P1, DOI 10.1146/annurev.es.04.110173.000245 Merton R.K, 1973, SOCIOLOGY SCI THEORE Mullins N. C., 1973, THEORIES THEORY GROU MULLINS NC, 1973, SCI STUD, V3, P245, DOI 10.1177/030631277300300302 MULLINS NC, 1972, MINERVA, V10, P51, DOI 10.1007/BF01881390 GRIFFITH BC, 1972, SCIENCE, V177, P959, DOI 10.1126/science.177.4053.959 Janis Irving L., 1972, VICTIMS GROUP THINK Merton R. K., 1970, SCI TECHNOLOGY SOC 1 Merton R. K., 1968, SOCIAL THEORY SOCIAL TUCKMAN BW, 1965, PSYCHOL BULL, V63, P384, DOI 10.1037/h0022100 Hagstrom W., 1965, SCI COMMUNITY Simmel G, 1955, CONFLICT WEB GROUP A Weber Max, 1946, M WEBER ESSAYS SOCIO, P129 NR 68 TC 1 Z9 1 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD FEB PY 2012 VL 77 IS 1 BP 21 EP 44 DI 10.1177/0003122411433763 PG 24 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 881IX UT WOS:000299478000002 ER PT J AU Childress, CC Friedkin, NE AF Childress, C. Clayton Friedkin, Noah E. TI Cultural Reception and Production: The Social Construction of Meaning in Book Clubs SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE culture; cultural reception; social networks; interpersonal influences ID UNITED-STATES; SOCIOLOGY; NETWORKS; EXPLANATIONS; ORGANIZATION; AMERICA; SYSTEMS AB Investigations of the reception of textual objects have alternately emphasized demographically conditioned patterns of evaluation and taste, or the agency of viewers, readers, and listeners in constructing their own cultural interpretations. In the present article, we advance an empirical and formal analysis of the cultural reception of texts in which interpretations of the multiple dimensions on which a text may be evaluated are transmitted and modified within small groups of individuals in face-to-face contact. We contribute an approach in which the intersection of social structure, individual readings, and interactive group processes all may enter into readers' interpretations of a novel. Our investigation focuses on a set of book clubs for which we collected data on group members' pre- and post-discussion evaluations of a specific book, and the interpersonal influence networks that were formed during the groups' discussions. We analyze these data with a multilevel model of individuals nested in groups, which allows us to address the effects of structure and group dynamics on cultural reception in a single analytic framework. C1 [Childress, C. Clayton] Univ Calif Santa Barbara, Dept Sociol, Santa Barbara, CA 93107 USA. RP Childress, CC (reprint author), Univ Calif Santa Barbara, Dept Sociol, Santa Barbara, CA 93107 USA EM ccchildress@gmail.com CR Friedkin N. E., 2011, SOCIAL INFLUENCE NET Schultz J, 2010, POETICS, V38, P610, DOI 10.1016/j.poetic.2010.09.002 Vaisey S, 2010, SOC FORCES, V88, P1595 Pachucki MA, 2010, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V36, P205, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.012809.102615 [Anonymous], 2009, KIRKUS REV 0808 Goodheart Adam, 2009, NY TIMES 1025, pBR26 [Anonymous], 2009, PUBLISHERS WEEK 0810 Goolrick Robert, 2009, WASHINGTON POST 1025 IndieBound, 2009, IND NEXT LIST OCT 09 Griswold Wendy, 2008, REGIONALISM READING Rodriquez J, 2006, J CONTEMP ETHNOGR, V35, P645, DOI 10.1177/0891241606286997 Lizardo O, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P778 Kaufman J, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P335, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.30.012703.110608 Mark NP, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P319, DOI 10.2307/1519727 Alexander J. C, 2003, MEANINGS SOCIAL LIFE Long Elizabeth, 2003, BOOK CLUBS WOMEN USE Griswold Wendy, 2003, CULTURE SOC CHANGING Martin JL, 2002, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P861, DOI 10.1086/343192 Friedkin NE, 2001, SOC NETWORKS, V23, P167, DOI 10.1016/S0378-8733(01)00036-3 McPherson JM, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P415, DOI DOI 10.1146/ANNUREV.S0C.27.1.415) Machor James L., 2001, RECEPTION STUDY LIT Peterson RA, 2000, POETICS, V28, P225, DOI 10.1016/S0304-422X(00)00023-1 Tepper SJ, 2000, POETICS, V27, P255, DOI 10.1016/S0304-422X(00)00003-6 Barton D., 2000, SITUATED LITERACIES Friedkin NE, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P856, DOI 10.2307/2657407 Friedkin NE, 1999, ADV GROUP, V16, P1 Gans Herbert, 1999, POPULAR CULTURE HIGH Morley David, 1999, NATIONWIDE TELEVISIO Mark N, 1998, SOC FORCES, V77, P453, DOI 10.2307/3005535 Barton D., 1998, LOCAL LITERACIES REA Friedkin N. E., 1998, STRUCTURAL THEORY SO Emirbayer Mustafa, 1998, SOCIOLOGY, V103, P962 Peterson RA, 1997, POETICS, V25, P75, DOI 10.1016/S0304-422X(97)00013-2 Pfaff KL, 1997, POETICS, V25, P45, DOI 10.1016/S0304-422X(97)00006-5 Aschaffenburg K, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P573, DOI 10.2307/2657427 Bryson B, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P884, DOI 10.2307/2096459 Peterson RA, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P900, DOI 10.2307/2096460 Lamont M, 1996, POETICS, V24, P31, DOI 10.1016/0304-422X(96)00005-8 Erickson BH, 1996, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P217, DOI 10.1086/230912 Halle David, 1996, INSIDE CULTURE ART C Oatley K, 1994, POETICS, V23, P53, DOI DOI 10.1016/0304-422X(94)P4296-S Hays S., 1994, SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY, V12, P57, DOI 10.2307/202035 Emirbayer Mustafa, 1994, SOCIOLOGY, V99, P1411 GRISWOLD W, 1993, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V19, P455, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.19.1.455 Lamont Michele, 1993, CULTIVATING DIFFEREN SEWELL WH, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1 Lamont M, 1992, MONEY MORALS MANNERS Press Andrea L., 1992, COMMUNICATION YB, V15, P91 Collins Randall, 1992, CULTIVATING DIFFEREN, P152 Jhally S., 1992, ENLIGHTENED RACISM C Medhurs Andy, 1991, MANY LIVES BATMAN CR, P149 DEVAULT ML, 1990, AM J SOCIOL, V95, P887, DOI 10.1086/229380 Liebes T., 1990, EXPORT MEANING CROSS Jorgensen D.L., 1989, PARTICIPANT OBSERVAT Fiske John, 1989, READING POPULAR DIMAGGIO P, 1987, AM SOCIOL REV, V52, P440, DOI 10.2307/2095290 GRISWOLD W, 1987, AM J SOCIOL, V92, P1077, DOI 10.1086/228628 SWIDLER A, 1986, AM SOCIOL REV, V51, P273, DOI 10.2307/2095521 DIMAGGIO P, 1985, AM J SOCIOL, V90, P1231, DOI 10.1086/228209 Bourdieu P, 1984, DISTINCTION SOCIAL C Radway J, 1984, READING ROMANCE WOME Giddens A., 1984, CONSTITUTION SOC OUT MCPHERSON M, 1983, AM SOCIOL REV, V48, P519, DOI 10.2307/2117719 Schmidt Siegfried J., 1982, FDN EMPIRICAL SCI LI Fish Stanley, 1982, IS THERE TEXT THIS C Anderson N. H, 1981, FDN INFORM INTEGRATI ZAJONC RB, 1980, AM PSYCHOL, V35, P151, DOI 10.1037/0003-066X.35.2.151 Foucault Michel, 1979, TEXTUAL STRATEGIES P, P141 FINE GA, 1979, AM SOCIOL REV, V44, P733, DOI 10.2307/2094525 DIMAGGIO P, 1978, THEOR SOC, V5, P141, DOI 10.1007/BF01702159 Denzin N. K., 1978, SOCIOLOGICAL METHODS Bourdieu P., 1977, OUTLINE THEORY PRACT Geertz C., 1977, INTERPRETATION CULTU Barthes R., 1974, S Z HIRSCH PM, 1972, AM J SOCIOL, V77, P639, DOI 10.1086/225192 Osgood C. E., 1957, MEASUREMENT MEANING Katz E., 1955, PERSONAL INFLUENCE P Wimsatt William, 1946, SEWANEE REV, V54, P468 DiMaggio Paul, SAGE HDB SOCIAL NETW Mohr John W., OXFORD HDB CULTURAL NR 80 TC 1 Z9 1 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD FEB PY 2012 VL 77 IS 1 BP 45 EP 68 DI 10.1177/0003122411428153 PG 24 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 881IX UT WOS:000299478000003 ER PT J AU Lim, A Tsutsui, K AF Lim, Alwyn Tsutsui, Kiyoteru TI Globalization and Commitment in Corporate Social Responsibility: Cross-National Analyses of Institutional and Political-Economy Effects SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE environmentalism; global and transnational sociology; human rights; world society approach; world-system theory ID HUMAN-RIGHTS TREATIES; GLOBAL CIVIL-SOCIETY; WORLD SOCIETY; CAPITAL PENETRATION; SELF-REGULATION; LABOR RIGHTS; DIFFUSION; DEPENDENCE; STATE; GOVERNANCE AB This article examines why global corporate social responsibility (CSR) frameworks have gained popularity in the past decade, despite their uncertain costs and benefits, and how they affect adherents' behavior. We focus on the two largest global frameworks-the United Nations Global Compact and the Global Reporting Initiative-to examine patterns of CSR adoption by governments and corporations. Drawing on institutional and political-economy theories, we develop a new analytic framework that focuses on four key environmental factors-global institutional pressure, local receptivity, foreign economic penetration, and national economic system. We propose two arguments about the relationship between stated commitment and subsequent action: decoupling due to lack of capacity and organized hypocrisy due to lack of will. Our cross-national time-series analyses show that global institutional pressure through nongovernmental linkages encourages CSR adoption, but this pressure leads to ceremonial commitment in developed countries and to substantive commitment in developing countries. Moreover, in developed countries, liberal economic policies increase ceremonial commitment, suggesting a pattern of organized hypocrisy whereby corporations in developed countries make discursive commitments without subsequent action. We also find that in developing countries, short-term trade relations exert greater influence on corporate CSR behavior than do long-term investment transactions. C1 [Tsutsui, Kiyoteru] Univ Michigan, Dept Sociol, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA. RP Tsutsui, K (reprint author), Univ Michigan, Dept Sociol, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA EM tsutsui@umich.edu CR Cao X, 2010, J POLICY ANAL MANAG, V30, P111, DOI 10.1002/pam.20546 Longhofer W, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P505, DOI 10.1177/0003122410374084 Prechel H, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P331, DOI 10.1177/0003122410372229 Transparency International, 2010, CORR PERC IND 2010 Meyer JW, 2010, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V36, P1, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.012809.102506 Gereffi Gary, 2010, BUSINESS POLITICS, V12 Lacy Peter, 2010, NEW ERA SUSTAINABILI Smith Jackie, 2010, GLOBALIZATION PRIVAT, P89 Greenhill B, 2009, AM POLIT SCI REV, V103, P669, DOI 10.1017/S0003055409990116 Potoski M, 2009, J POLICY ANAL MANAG, V28, P221, DOI 10.1002/pam.20424 Abouharb MR, 2009, REV INT ORGAN, V4, P47, DOI 10.1007/s11558-008-9050-5 Soule S.A., 2009, CONTENTION CORPORATE Abu Sharkh Miriam, 2009, 90 STANF U FREEM SPO Kinderman Daniel, 2009, 32009301 SP WISS BER Waddock Sandra A., 2009, J CORPORATE CITIZENS, V33, P35 Strang D, 2009, ORGAN STUD, V30, P31, DOI 10.1177/01708040608100517 Oshionebo Evaristus, 2009, REGULATING TRANSNATI Googins Bradley, 2009, STATE CORPORATE CITI Keefer Philip, 2009, DPI2009 DATABASE POL Wotipka CM, 2008, SOCIOL FORUM, V23, P724, DOI 10.1111/j.1573-7861.2008.00092.x King BG, 2008, ADMIN SCI QUART, V53, P395, DOI 10.2189/asqu.53.3.395 Tsutsui K, 2008, SOC PROBL, V55, P391, DOI 10.1525/sp.2008.55.3.391 Margaret RSomers, 2008, GENEALOGIES CITIZENS World Bank, 2008, WORLD DEV IND Bair J, 2008, ECON SOC, V37, P339, DOI 10.1080/03085140802172664 Waddock Sandra A., 2008, ACAD MANAGEMENT PERS, V22, P89 Jiang Bin, 2008, J BUS ETHICS, V85, P77 Clougherty Joseph A., 2008, BUSINESS, V39, P613 Davis Gerald F., 2008, STANFORD SOCIAL WIN, P31 Sagafi-Nejad Tagi, 2008, UN TRANSNATIONAL COR O'Brien RM, 2007, QUAL QUANT, V41, P673, DOI 10.1007/s11135-006-9018-6 Bartley T, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P297, DOI 10.1086/518871 Mosley L, 2007, COMP POLIT STUD, V40, P923, DOI 10.1177/0010414006293442 Bartley T, 2007, SOC PROBL, V54, P229, DOI 10.1525/sp.2007.54.3.229 Campbell JL, 2007, ACAD MANAGE REV, V32, P946 Barnett ML, 2007, ACAD MANAGE REV, V32, P794 Arceneaux K, 2007, STATE POLIT POLICY Q, V7, P81, DOI 10.1177/153244000700700105 Power M., 2007, ORG UNCERTAINTY DESI Hilbe J., 2007, NEGATIVE BINOMIAL RE Seidman Gay, 2007, BOYCOTT LABOR RIGHTS UN Global Compact Office, 2007, LOC NETW REP DEEP EN Drori GS, 2006, ADMIN SCI QUART, V51, P205 Prakash A, 2006, AM J POLIT SCI, V50, P350, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-5907.2006.00188.x Mizruchi MS, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P310 Drori Gili S., 2006, GLOBALIZATION ORG WO, P91 Jang Yong Suk, 2006, GLOBALIZATION ORG WO, P167 Shanahan Suzanne, 2006, GLOBALIZATION ORG WO, P196 Smith J, 2005, SOC FORCES, V84, P621, DOI 10.1353/sof.2006.0036 Henisz WJ, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P871 Schofer E, 2005, SOC FORCES, V84, P25, DOI 10.1353/sof.2005.0127 Potoski M, 2005, AM J POLIT SCI, V49, P235, DOI 10.1111/j.0092-5853.2005.00120.x Gereffi G, 2005, REV INT POLIT ECON, V12, P78, DOI 10.1080/09692290500049805 Wejnert B, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P53 Emilie Hafner-Burton, 2005, SOCIOLOGY, V110, P1373 Vogel David, 2005, MARKET VIRTUE POTENT Lechner Frank, 2005, WORLD CULTURE ORIGIN Gallagher M., 2005, CONTAGIOUS CAPITALIS Tsutsui K, 2004, SOCIOL FORUM, V19, P63, DOI 10.1023/B:SOFO.0000019648.21481.91 Power M., 2004, RISK MANAGEMENT EVER Cashore Benjamin, 2004, GOVERNING MARKETS FO Shamir R., 2004, CRITICAL SOCIOLOGY, V30, P669, DOI 10.1163/1569163042119831 Wynhoven Ursula, 2004, EMBEDDING HUMAN RIGH Margolis JD, 2003, ADMIN SCI QUART, V48, P268, DOI 10.2307/3556659 Beckfield J, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P401, DOI 10.2307/1519730 Welzel C, 2003, EUR J POLIT RES, V42, P341, DOI 10.1111/1475-6765.00086 Kentor J, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P301, DOI 10.2307/1519770 Baron DP, 2003, J ECON MANAGE STRAT, V12, P31, DOI 10.1162/105864003321220724 Greene W., 2003, ECONOMETRIC ANAL Sullivan Rory, 2003, BUSINESS HUMAN RIGHT Whitehouse Lisa, 2003, GLOBAL SOCIAL POLICY, V3, P299, DOI 10.1177/14680181030033002 Ruggie John G., 2003, TAMING GLOBALIZATION, P93 Leipziger D, 2003, CORPORATE RESPONSIBI Smith J, 2002, INT SOCIOL, V17, P505, DOI 10.1177/0268580902017004003 Hathaway OA, 2002, YALE LAW J, V111, P1935, DOI 10.2307/797642 Guler I, 2002, ADMIN SCI QUART, V47, P207, DOI 10.2307/3094804 Stiglitz J, 2002, GLOBALIZATION ITS DI Chang H-J, 2002, KICKING AWAY LADDER Fourcade-Gourinchas Marion, 2002, SOCIOLOGY, V108, P533 Delmas Magali, 2002, J COMP POLICY ANAL, V4, P5, DOI 10.1023/A:1014965605401 Beck T, 2001, WORLD BANK ECON REV, V15, P165, DOI 10.1093/wber/15.1.165 Richards DL, 2001, INT STUD QUART, V45, P219, DOI 10.1111/0020-8833.00189 Sklair L., 2001, TRANSNATIONAL CAPITA Hoffman Andrew, 2001, HERESY DOGMA I HIST Haufler V, 2001, PUBLIC ROLE PRIVATE Conroy Michael E., 2001, POLITICAL EC RES I W Maxwell JW, 2000, J LAW ECON, V43, P583, DOI 10.1086/467466 King AA, 2000, ACAD MANAGE J, V43, P698, DOI 10.2307/1556362 Meyer JW, 2000, INT SOCIOL, V15, P233, DOI 10.1177/0268580900015002006 Frank DJ, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P96, DOI 10.2307/2657291 Garcia-Johnson R., 2000, EXPORTING ENV US MUL Jang YS, 2000, INT J COMP SOCIOL, V41, P255, DOI 10.1163/156851801511756 Corporate Europe Observatory, 2000, GLOB COMP GIV TNCS F Transnational Resource Action Center, 2000, TANGL UP BLUE CORP P Union of International Associations, 2000, YB INT ORG Frank DJ, 1999, SOCIOL INQ, V69, P523, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.1999.tb00885.x Alderson AS, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P606, DOI 10.2307/2657259 Hedley RA, 1999, INT J COMP SOCIOL, V40, P215, DOI 10.1177/002071529904000202 Smith J, 1999, HUM RIGHTS QUART, V21, P207, DOI 10.1353/hrq.1999.0013 CARROLL AB, 1999, BUS SOC, V38, P268, DOI 10.1177/000765039903800303 Risse T., 1999, POWER HUMAN RIGHTS I Krasner Stephen D., 1999, SOVEREIGNTY ORG HYPO Soysa Indra, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P766 Kentor J, 1998, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P1024, DOI 10.1086/231295 Franklin J, 1997, COMP POLIT STUD, V30, P576, DOI 10.1177/0010414097030005003 Meyer JW, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P144 Boli J, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P171, DOI 10.2307/2657298 Long J. Scott, 1997, REGRESSION MODELS CA Dixon WJ, 1996, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P543, DOI 10.1086/230956 Firebaugh G, 1996, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P563, DOI 10.1086/230957 Fligstein N, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P656, DOI 10.2307/2096398 Meyer WH, 1996, HUM RIGHTS QUART, V18, P368, DOI 10.1353/hrq.1996.0020 BECK N, 1995, AM POLIT SCI REV, V89, P634, DOI 10.2307/2082979 Pava Moses L., 1995, CORPORATE SOCIAL RES Hansen Peter, 1991, FORDHAM INT LAW J, V14, P881 Fligstein N., 1990, TRANSFORMATION CORPO Domhoff G. William, 1990, POWER ELITE STATE PO LIN DY, 1989, J AM STAT ASSOC, V84, P1074, DOI 10.2307/2290085 Vogel D., 1989, FLUCTUATING FORTUNES MITCHELL NJ, 1988, WORLD POLIT, V40, P476, DOI 10.2307/2010315 Thomas G. M., 1987, I STRUCTURE CONSTITU SIKKINK K, 1986, INT ORGAN, V40, P815 Granovetter Mark, 1985, SOCIOLOGY, V91, P481 DIMAGGIO PJ, 1983, AM SOCIOL REV, V48, P147, DOI 10.2307/2095101 Wallerstein I., 1979, CAPITALIST WORLD EC MEYER JW, 1977, AM J SOCIOL, V83, P340, DOI 10.1086/226550 Block Fred, 1977, SOCIALIST REVOLUTION, V7, P6 CHASEDUNN C, 1975, AM SOCIOL REV, V40, P720, DOI 10.2307/2094176 DAVIS K, 1973, ACAD MANAGE J, V16, P312, DOI 10.2307/255331 FRIEDMAN M., 1970, NY TIMES MAGAZI 0913, P32 Wiest Dawn, SOCIAL MOVE IN PRESS NR 130 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD FEB PY 2012 VL 77 IS 1 BP 69 EP 98 DI 10.1177/0003122411432701 PG 30 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 881IX UT WOS:000299478000004 ER PT J AU Sallaz, JJ AF Sallaz, Jeffrey J. TI Politics of Organizational Adornment: Lessons from Las Vegas and Beyond SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE culture; design; economy; markets; politics ID SOCIAL-MOVEMENTS; FIELD-THEORY; MARKET; DYNAMICS; IDENTITY; ISOMORPHISM; INDUSTRY; SOCIETY; POLICY; CONSTRUCTION AB Practices of design, although integral to contemporary capitalism, are too often overlooked by economic sociologists. To remedy this, I study a novel technology of organizational adornment: theming. Case data drawn from the global casino industry reveal that theming has diffused worldwide as standard business practice. Close examination, however, reveals divergence across jurisdictions in terms of the meanings that themes convey. These patterns derive from neither successful marketing (i.e., customizing design for consumers) nor symbolic isomorphism (i.e., signaling deference to global norms). In line with the markets-as-politics paradigm, I analyze design as a field-specific conception of control. In this view, themes signal to particular constituencies that one is a certain kind of organization (and not another). The makeup of these signals and audiences-that is, what counts as socially legitimate action-will depend on the political field in which a firm is embedded. Results demonstrate the explanatory power of markets-as-politics and also extend this theory by elucidating the performative mechanisms that bridge economic and political domains. C1 Univ Arizona, Dept Sociol, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA. RP Sallaz, JJ (reprint author), Univ Arizona, Dept Sociol, POB 210027, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA EM jsallaz@email.arizona.edu CR Krippner Greta, 2011, CAPITALIZING CRISIS Navis C, 2010, ADMIN SCI QUART, V55, P439 Sallaz JJ, 2010, WORK OCCUPATION, V37, P295, DOI 10.1177/0730888410373076 Saguy AC, 2010, SOC PROBL, V57, P231, DOI 10.1525/sp.2010.57.2.231 FLIGSTEIN Neil J., 2010, MARKETS TRIAL EC SOC, P29 Pulver S, 2009, GLOBAL ENVIRON POLIT, V9, P1, DOI 10.1162/glep.2009.9.2.1 Dobbin F, 2009, INVENTING EQUAL OPPORTUNITY, P1 Davis G.F., 2009, MANAGED MARKETS FINA Sallaz JJ, 2009, LABOR OF LUCK: CASINO CAPITALISM IN THE UNITED STATES AND SOUTH AFRICA, P1 Simon B, 2009, EVERYTHING BUT THE COFFEE: LEARNING ABOUT AMERICA FROM STARBUCKS, P1 Evans R, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P970 Forsythe Steve J., 2008, INT GAMING WAGER MAR, P20 Bond Philip, 2008, J FINANC ECON, V94, P412 Rao Hayagreeva, 2008, MARKET REBELS ACTIVI Armstrong Elizabeth, 2008, SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY, V26, P74 Podolny Joel M., 2008, STATUS SIGNALS SOCIO Guillen Mauro F., 2008, TAYLORIZED BEAUTY ME Emirbayer Mustafa, 2008, THEOR SOC, V37, P1 Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, 2008, VIS PROF Krippner GR, 2007, THEOR SOC, V36, P477, DOI 10.1007/s11186-007-9043-z King BG, 2007, ADMIN SCI QUART, V52, P413 Marquis C, 2007, ACAD MANAGE REV, V32, P925 Almeling R, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P319 Dobbin F, 2007, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V33, P449, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.33.090106.142507 Fourcade M, 2007, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V33, P285, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.33.040406.131642 Hannan M. T., 2007, LOGICS ORG THEORY AU Ritzer G., 2007, GLOBALIZATION NOTHIN, V2 Fligstein Neil, 2007, SOCIOLOGY, V33, P105 Lukas Scott A., 2007, THEMED SPACE LOCATIN Sallaz JJ, 2006, THEOR SOC, V35, P265, DOI 10.1007/s11186-006-9002-0 Fligstein N, 2006, AM BEHAV SCI, V49, P949, DOI 10.1177/0002764205285174 Pedersen JS, 2006, AM BEHAV SCI, V49, P897, DOI 10.1177/0002764205284798 Cramer RA, 2006, LAW SOCIAL INQUIRY, V31, P313, DOI 10.1111/j.1747-4469.2006.00013.x VOGEL D. J., 2006, MARKET VIRTUE POTENT Healy K, 2006, LAST BEST GIFTS ALTR Spilde Contreras Kate, 2006, AM BEHAV SCI, V50, P315 Hannan MT, 2005, J ECON PERSPECT, V19, P51, DOI 10.1257/0895330053147985 Julier G, 2005, URBAN STUD, V42, P869, DOI 10.1080/00420980500107474 Bourdieu P., 2005, SOCIAL STRUCTURES EC Pedriana N, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P709, DOI 10.1086/422588 Edelman LB, 2004, LAW SOC REV, V38, P181, DOI 10.1111/j.0023-9216.2004.03802003.x Bryman A, 2004, DISNEYIZATION SOC Hall P.A., 2004, VARIETIES CAPITALISM Martin JL, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P1, DOI 10.1086/375201 Bannister Roy, 2003, INT GAMING WAGER JUL, P17 Jaschke Karin, 2003, STRIPPING LAS VEGAS Guillen Mauro F., 2003, LIMITS CONVERGENCE G Johnson J, 2002, NY TIMES BK REV, P14 Glynn MA, 2002, ACAD MANAGE J, V45, P267, DOI 10.2307/3069296 Polos L, 2002, IND CORP CHANGE, V11, P85, DOI 10.1093/icc/11.1.85 Rothman H., 2002, NEON METROPOLIS LAS Connelly Maureen, 2002, NATIVE AM CASINO DEC, P26 Klein Norman M., 2002, GRIT GLITTER TALES R, P17 Fligstein N, 2001, ARCHITECTURE MARKETS Schneiberg Marc, 2001, SOCIOLOGY, V107, P101 Fligstein Neil, 2001, SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY, V19, P105 Christopher A. J., 2001, ATLAS CHANGING S AFR Gottdiener Mark, 2001, THEMING AM DREAMS VI Carroll GR, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P715, DOI 10.1086/318962 Dobbin F, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P631, DOI 10.2307/2657540 Meyer JW, 2000, SOCIOL THEOR, V18, P100, DOI 10.1111/0735-2751.00090 Friedman Bill, 2000, DESIGNING CASINOS DO Mason W. Dale, 2000, INDIAN GAMING TRIBAL Martin JL, 1999, THEOR SOC, V28, P425, DOI 10.1023/A:1006969721668 Beardsworth A, 1999, SOCIOL REV, V47, P228, DOI 10.1111/1467-954X.00171 Mazza C., 1999, CLAIM INTENT PERSUAS Pine B.J., 1999, EXPERIENCE EC WORK I Raz A. E., 1999, RIDING BLACK SHIP JA Kranes David, 1999, CASINO EXECUTIVE DEC, P44 Jacobson Celean, 1999, SUNDAY TIMES 0124, P1 Burawoy M, 1998, SOCIOL THEOR, V16, P4, DOI 10.1111/0735-2751.00040 Strang D, 1998, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V24, P265, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.24.1.265 Hannigan J, 1998, FANTASY CITY PLEASUR Marchand Roland, 1998, CREATING CORPORATE S Marling Karal Ann, 1998, SEEN TV VISUAL CULTU Henderson Pamela W., 1998, J MARKETING, V62, P14 Emirbayer M, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P281, DOI 10.1086/231209 Guthrie D, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P1258, DOI 10.1086/231084 Schmitt B. H., 1997, MARKETING AESTHETICS Meyer John W., 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P1444 Kluger Richard, 1997, ASHES ASHES AM 100 Y Eco Umberto, 1997, FAITH FAKES TRAVELS Dobbin Frank, 1997, FORGING IND POLICY U Kenyon Adrian, 1997, GAMING AFRICA MAR, P12 Learmont Tom, 1997, GAMING AFRICA MAR, P18 Fligstein N, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P656, DOI 10.2307/2096398 Appadurai A, 1996, MODERNITY LARGE CULT Barnes B., 1996, SCI KNOWLEDGE SOCIOL SIMMONS BETH A., 2009, DEALING VIRTUE INT C Adams David Wallace, 1995, ED EXTINCTION AM IND Cerulo Karen, 1995, IDENTITY DESIGNS SIG Farrell Ronald A., 1995, BLACK BOOK MOB UNTOL Wiehahn Nicholas Everhardus, 1995, COMPLETE WIEHAHN REP Zelizer V., 1994, PRICING PRICELESS CH Swedberg R., 1994, HDB EC SOCIOLOGY, P255 West Edward, 1994, BUSINESS DAY 0228, P1 Kazancigil Ali, 1994, COMP NATIONS CONCEPT, P213 Baudrillard Jean, 1994, SIMULCRA SIMULATION Schechter Alvin H., 1993, DESIGN MANAGEMENT J, V4, P33 EDELMAN LB, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V97, P1531, DOI 10.1086/229939 Hulse James W., 1991, SILVER STATE NEVADAS Campbell John L., 1990, AM SOCIOL REV, V55, P3 Edwards Jerome E., 1990, NEVADA HIST SOC Q, V33, P16 HAMILTON GG, 1988, AM J SOCIOL, V94, pS52, DOI 10.1086/228942 Ewen S., 1988, ALL CONSUMING IMAGES NELSON S, 1986, DRAMA REV, V30, P106, DOI 10.2307/1145786 Granovetter Mark, 1985, SOCIOLOGY, V91, P481 CARROLL GR, 1985, AM J SOCIOL, V90, P1262, DOI 10.1086/228210 DIMAGGIO PJ, 1983, AM SOCIOL REV, V48, P147, DOI 10.2307/2095101 Skolnick Jerome, 1978, HOUSE CARDS LEGALIZA Venturi Robert, 1977, LEARNING LAS VEGAS R Becker H. S., 1963, OUTSIDERS STUDIES SO Gusfield Joseph, 1963, SYMBOLIC CRUSADE STA Goffman E, 1959, PRESENTATION SELF EV Kefauver Estes, 1951, CRIME AM NR 115 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD FEB PY 2012 VL 77 IS 1 BP 99 EP 119 DI 10.1177/0003122411430496 PG 21 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 881IX UT WOS:000299478000005 ER PT J AU Stets, JE Carter, MJ AF Stets, Jan E. Carter, Michael J. TI A Theory of the Self for the Sociology of Morality SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE emotions; identity; morality; self ID IDENTITY THEORY; CONCEPTIONS; MOTIVATION; CENTRALITY; JUDGMENT/; EMOTIONS; BEHAVIOR; MODEL AB Sociology has seen a renewed interest in the study of morality. However, a theory of the self that explains individual variation in moral behavior and emotions is noticeably absent. In this study, we use identity theory to explain this variability. According to identity theory, actors are self-regulating entities whose goal is to verify their identities. An individual's moral identity-wherever it falls on the moral-immoral continuum-guides behavior, and people experience negative emotions when identity verification does not ensue. Furthermore, the identity verification process occurs within situations that have cultural expectations-that is, framing rules and feeling rules-regarding how individuals should act and feel. These cultural expectations also influence the degree to which people behave morally. We test these assumptions on a sample of more than 350 university students. We investigate whether the moral identity and framing situations in moral terms influences behavior and feelings. Findings reveal that the identity process and framing of situations as moral are significantly associated with moral action and moral emotions of guilt and shame. C1 [Stets, Jan E.] Univ Calif Riverside, Dept Sociol, Social Psychol Lab, Riverside, CA 92508 USA. [Carter, Michael J.] Calif State Univ Northridge, Northridge, CA 91330 USA. RP Stets, JE (reprint author), Univ Calif Riverside, Dept Sociol, Social Psychol Lab, Riverside, CA 92508 USA EM jan.stets@ucr.edu CR Stets JE, 2011, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V74, P192, DOI 10.1177/0190272511407621 Wikstrom POH, 2010, HANDB SOCIOL SOC RES, P211, DOI 10.1007/978-1-4419-6896-8_12 Haidt J., 2010, HDB SOCIAL PSYCHOL, P797 Turner JH, 2010, HANDB SOCIOL SOC RES, P125, DOI 10.1007/978-1-4419-6896-8_7 Sayer A, 2010, HANDB SOCIOL SOC RES, P163, DOI 10.1007/978-1-4419-6896-8_9 Hegtvedt KA, 2010, HANDB SOCIOL SOC RES, P331, DOI 10.1007/978-1-4419-6896-8_18 Aben G, 2010, HANDB SOCIOL SOC RES, P561, DOI 10.1007/978-1-4419-6896-8_30 Frimer JA, 2009, DEV PSYCHOL, V45, P1669, DOI 10.1037/a0017418 Aquino K, 2009, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V97, P123, DOI 10.1037/a0015406 Burke PJ, 2009, IDENTITY THEORY Haidt J., 2009, SOCIAL PSYCHOL BASES, P371 Narvaez Darcia, 2009, PERSONALITY IDENTITY Aquino Karl, 2009, PERSONALITY IDENTITY, P375, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511627125.018 Brody L.R., 2008, HDB EMOTIONS, P395 Hardy SA, 2008, J MORAL EDUC, V37, P205, DOI 10.1080/03057240802009512 Vaisey S, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P851 Tangney JP, 2007, ANNU REV PSYCHOL, V58, P345, DOI 10.1146/annurev.psych.56.091103.070145 Fourcade M, 2007, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V33, P285, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.33.040406.131642 Hardy SA, 2006, MOTIV EMOTION, V30, P207, DOI 10.1007/s11031-006-9034-9 Hauser M., 2006, MORAL MINDS NATURE D Burke Peter J., 2006, PURPOSE MEANING ACTI, P267 Stets Jan E., 2006, PURPOSE MEANING ACTI, P293 Turner Jonathan H., 2006, HDB SOCIOLOGY EMOTIO, P544, DOI 10.1007/978-0-387-30715-2_24 Burke PJ, 2005, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V68, P359 Walker LJ, 2004, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V86, P629, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.86.4.629 Collins Randall, 2004, INTERACTION RITUAL C Lapsley Daniel K., 2004, MORAL DEV SELF IDENT Atkins R, 2004, MORAL DEVELOPMENT, SELF, AND IDENTITY, P65 Hart Daniel, 2004, NURTURING MORALITY, P157 Haidt J, 2003, HDB AFFECTIVE SCI, P852 Aquino K, 2002, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V83, P1423, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.83.6.1423 Tangney J. P., 2002, SHAME GUILT Stryker Sheldon, 2002, SYMBOLIC INTERACTION Tangney June P., 2002, PSYCHODYNAMICS GENDE, P251, DOI DOI 10.1037/10450-007 Haidt J, 2001, PSYCHOL REV, V108, P814, DOI 10.1037//0033-295X.108.4.814 Greene JD, 2001, SCIENCE, V293, P2105, DOI 10.1126/science.1062872 Stryker S, 2000, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V63, P284, DOI 10.2307/2695840 Hoffman M. L., 2000, EMPATHY MORAL DEV IM Blasi A, 1999, J THEOR SOC BEHAV, V29, P1, DOI 10.1111/1468-5914.00088 Bandura A, 1999, Pers Soc Psychol Rev, V3, P193, DOI 10.1207/s15327957pspr0303_3 Tangney JP, 1998, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V75, P256, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.75.1.256 Walker LJ, 1998, DEV PSYCHOL, V34, P403, DOI 10.1037/0012-1649.34.3.403 Burke PJ, 1997, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V60, P277, DOI 10.2307/2787090 Shweder R.M.N., 1997, MORALITY HLTH, P119 Walker Lawrence J., 1995, MORALITY EVERYDAY LI, P371 Markus Hazel R., 1991, PSYCHOL REV, V98, P234 HIGGINS ET, 1987, PSYCHOL REV, V94, P319, DOI 10.1037//0033-295X.94.3.319 Serpe R. T., 1987, ADV GROUP PROCESSES, P41 Blasi A, 1984, MORALITY MORAL BEHAV, P128 Hochschild A, 1983, MANAGED HEART COMMER Gilligan C, 1982, DIFFERENT VOICE PSYC Stryker S, 1982, PERSONALITY ROLES SO, P199 Kohlberg Lawrence, 1981, PHILOS MORAL DEV BLASI A, 1980, PSYCHOL BULL, V88, P1, DOI 10.1037//0033-2909.88.1.1 Hochschild Arlie R., 1979, SOCIOLOGY, V85, P551 Weber Max, 1978, WEBER SELECTIONS TRA, P69 Goffman E, 1974, FRAME ANAL ESSAY ORG Weber M., 1968, EC SOC Goffman Erving, 1967, INTERACTION RITUAL E Piaget J., 1965, MORAL JUDGMENT CHILD Durkheim E, 1965, ELEMENTARY FORMS REL Durkheim E, 1961, MORAL ED STUDY THEOR Goffman E, 1959, PRESENTATION SELF EV Osgood C. E., 1957, MEASUREMENT MEANING NR 64 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD FEB PY 2012 VL 77 IS 1 BP 120 EP 140 DI 10.1177/0003122411433762 PG 21 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 881IX UT WOS:000299478000006 ER PT J AU Molm, LD Whitham, MM Melamed, D AF Molm, Linda D. Whitham, Monica M. Melamed, David TI Forms of Exchange and Integrative Bonds: Effects of History and Embeddedness SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE embeddedness; reciprocity; social exchange; solidarity; trust ID SOCIAL-EXCHANGE; RECIPROCAL EXCHANGE; NETWORKS; MARKET; COMMITMENT; TRUST; RISK; ORGANIZATIONS; TRANSACTIONS; UNCERTAINTY AB In this study we bring together two sociological traditions: experimental research on how different forms of exchange affect attachments to partners and relationships, and organizational research in natural settings on how embeddedness contributes to social capital. We conceptualize embeddedness in terms of the underlying forms of exchange-negotiated and reciprocal-that are associated with economic exchanges and the social relationships in which they are embedded. Building upon the reciprocity theory of social exchange, we test predictions of how relationship histories (i.e., different sequences of the two forms of exchange) and relationship contexts (i.e., embedding one form of exchange within an ongoing relation of the other form) modify effects of each form in isolation. Results from two experiments show that the reciprocal form of exchange, independent of close ties or personal associations, is critical for producing the strong trust and affective bonds typically associated with embedded relationships. A history or context of reciprocal exchange significantly boosts integrative bonds for negotiated exchange, whereas a history or context of negotiated exchange dampens integrative bonds for reciprocal exchange only moderately. The relative effects of history and context vary by actors' positions of power. C1 [Molm, Linda D.] Univ Arizona, Dept Sociol, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA. RP Molm, LD (reprint author), Univ Arizona, Dept Sociol, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA EM molml@u.arizona.edu CR Molm LD, 2010, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V73, P119, DOI 10.1177/0190272510369079 Cheshire C, 2010, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V73, P176, DOI 10.1177/0190272509359615 Baker W, 2009, AM BEHAV SCI, V52, P1531, DOI 10.1177/0002764209331525 Molm LD, 2009, SOCIOL THEOR, V27, P1, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9558.2009.00336.x Lawler EJ, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P519 Molm LD, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P205, DOI 10.1086/517900 Molm LD, 2007, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V70, P199 Bargh JA, 2006, EUR J SOC PSYCHOL, V36, P147, DOI 10.1002/ejsp.336 Molm Linda D., 2006, SOC FORCES, V84, P2325 Uzzi B, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P319 Molm LD, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P128, DOI 10.2307/3088905 Moody J, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P103, DOI 10.2307/3088904 McGinn KL, 2002, ADMIN SCI QUART, V47, P442, DOI 10.2307/3094847 Hardin R., 2002, TRUST TRUSTWORTHINES Lin N, 2002, SOCIAL CAPITAL THEOR Mizruchi MS, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P647, DOI 10.2307/3088952 Lawler EJ, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P321, DOI 10.1086/324071 Molm LD, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P1396, DOI 10.1086/210434 Benford Robert D., 2000, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V26, P11 Deutsch Morton, 2000, HDB CONFLICT RESOLUT, P41 Hegtvedt KA, 1999, SOC FORCES, V78, P269, DOI 10.2307/3005797 Uzzi B, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P481, DOI 10.2307/2657252 Dacin MT, 1999, J MANAGE, V25, P317, DOI 10.1177/014920639902500304 DiMaggio P, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P619, DOI 10.2307/2657331 Portes A., 1998, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V22, P1 Burt RS, 1997, SOC NETWORKS, V19, P355, DOI 10.1016/S0378-8733(97)00003-8 Offer A, 1997, ECON HIST REV, V50, P450, DOI 10.1111/1468-0289.00064 Thye SR, 1997, SOC FORCES, V75, P1031, DOI 10.2307/2580529 Kranton RE, 1996, AM ECON REV, V86, P830 Uzzi B, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P674, DOI 10.2307/2096399 Lawler EJ, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P89, DOI 10.2307/2096408 KOLLOCK P, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V100, P313, DOI 10.1086/230539 MOLM LD, 1994, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V57, P163, DOI 10.2307/2786874 PORTES A, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1320, DOI 10.1086/230191 LARSON A, 1992, ADMIN SCI QUART, V37, P76, DOI 10.2307/2393534 BAKER WE, 1990, AM J SOCIOL, V96, P589, DOI 10.1086/229573 POWELL WW, 1990, RES ORGAN BEHAV, V12, P295 Zukin S, 1990, STRUCTURES CAPITAL S, P1 COLEMAN JS, 1988, AM J SOCIOL, V94, pS95, DOI 10.1086/228943 KEOHANE RO, 1986, INT ORGAN, V40, P1 Granovetter Mark, 1985, SOCIOLOGY, V91, P481 COOK KS, 1983, AM J SOCIOL, V89, P275, DOI 10.1086/227866 Emerson R. M., 1981, SOCIAL PSYCHOL SOCIO, P30 KAHNEMAN D, 1979, PROSPECT THEORY ANAL, V47, P263 COOK KS, 1978, AM SOCIOL REV, V43, P721, DOI 10.2307/2094546 Emerson Richard M., 1972, SOCIOLOGICAL THEORIE, V2, P57 Blau P.M, 1964, EXCHANGE POWER SOCIA Macaulay Stewart, 1963, AM SOCIOL REV, V28, P55 Homans G., 1961, SOCIAL BEHAV ITS ELE NR 49 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD FEB PY 2012 VL 77 IS 1 BP 141 EP 165 DI 10.1177/0003122411434610 PG 25 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 881IX UT WOS:000299478000007 ER PT J AU Schneider, D AF Schneider, Daniel TI Gender Deviance and Household Work: The Role of Occupation SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID DIVISION-OF-LABOR; GLASS ESCALATOR; UNITED-STATES; ECONOMIC DEPENDENCY; SEX SEGREGATION; COHABITING MEN; MARITAL-STATUS; TRUMP MONEY; PAID WORK; HOUSEWORK AB This article takes a new approach to gender and housework by identifying a new measure of gender deviance-work in gender-typical occupations-and by arguing that men who do "women's work" and women who do "men's work" in the labor market may seek to neutralize their gender deviance by doing male-and female-typed work at home. Analysis of data from the National Survey of Families and Households and the 2003-7 waves of the American Time Use Survey shows that men who do "women's work" in the market spend more time on male-typed housework relative to men in gender-balanced occupations and their wives spend more time on female-typed housework. Women in gender-atypical occupations also do more female-typed housework than women in gender-balanced occupations. The article provides clearer evidence about the important ways in which cultural conceptions of gender shape and are shaped by economic processes. C1 Princeton Univ, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA. RP Schneider, D (reprint author), Princeton Univ, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA CR Schneider D, 2011, J MARRIAGE FAM, V73, P845, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2011.00851.x Thebaud S, 2010, GENDER SOC, V24, P330, DOI 10.1177/0891243210369105 Levanon A, 2009, SOC FORCES, V88, P865 Ridgeway CL, 2009, GENDER SOC, V23, P145, DOI 10.1177/0891243208330313 West C, 2009, GENDER SOC, V23, P112, DOI 10.1177/0891243208326529 Alexandrowicz Carrie, 2009, THESIS BROWN U Snyder KA, 2008, SOC PROBL, V55, P271, DOI 10.1525/sp.2008.55.2.271 Kan MY, 2008, WORK EMPLOY SOC, V22, P45, DOI 10.1177/0950017007087416 Davis SN, 2007, J FAM ISSUES, V28, P1246, DOI 10.1177/0192513X07300968 Gupta S, 2007, J MARRIAGE FAM, V69, P399, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2007.00373.x von Hippel PT, 2007, SOCIOL METHODOL, V37, P83, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9531.2007.00180.x Bianchi S. M., 2006, CHANGING RHYTHMS AM Reskin BF, 2005, J ECON PERSPECT, V19, P71, DOI 10.1257/0895330053148010 Gatta ML, 2005, SOCIOL FORUM, V20, P369, DOI 10.1007/s11206-005-6594-5 Simpson R, 2005, GENDER WORK ORGAN, V12, P363, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0432.2005.00278.x Bonke J, 2005, SOC INDIC RES, V70, P349, DOI 10.1007/s11205-004-1547-6 Zelizer VA, 2005, PURCHASE OF INTIMACY, P1 England P, 2005, HANDBOOK OF ECONOMIC SOCIOLOGY, SECOND EDITION, P627 Evertsson M, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P1272, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00092.x Dellinger K, 2004, GENDER SOC, V18, P545, DOI 10.1177/0891243204267401 Cotter David, 2004, AM PEOPLE CENSUS 200 Bittman M, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P186, DOI 10.1086/378341 Kaufman RL, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P547, DOI 10.2307/3088945 Budig MJ, 2002, SOC PROBL, V49, P258, DOI 10.1525/sp.2002.49.2.258 Baunach DM, 2002, SOC SCI RES, V31, P77, DOI 10.1006/ssre.2001.0719 Budig MJ, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P204, DOI 10.2307/2657415 Bianchi SM, 2000, SOC FORCES, V79, P191, DOI 10.2307/2675569 Britton DM, 2000, GENDER SOC, V14, P418, DOI 10.1177/089124300014003004 Greenstein TN, 2000, J MARRIAGE FAM, V62, P322, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2000.00322.x Lupton Ben, 2000, BRIT J MANAGE, V11, pS33 Shelton Beth Ann, 2000, TIES THAT BIND PERSP, P343 Gupta S, 1999, J MARRIAGE FAM, V61, P700, DOI 10.2307/353571 Cejcka Mary Ann, 1999, PERSONALITY SOCIAL P, V25, P413 Gupta Sanjiv., 1999, ANN M AM SOC ASS CHI Press JE, 1998, GENDER SOC, V12, P188, DOI 10.1177/089124398012002005 Tam T, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P1652, DOI 10.1086/231129 Shelton BA, 1996, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V22, P299, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.22.1.299 Williams Christine L, 1995, STILL MANS WORLD MEN BRINES J, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V100, P652, DOI 10.1086/230577 ENGLAND P, 1994, SOC FORCES, V73, P65, DOI 10.2307/2579918 SOUTH SJ, 1994, AM SOCIOL REV, V59, P327, DOI 10.2307/2095937 PRESSER HB, 1994, AM SOCIOL REV, V59, P348, DOI 10.2307/2095938 PERRYJENKINS M, 1994, J MARRIAGE FAM, V56, P165, DOI 10.2307/352711 MARINI MM, 1993, SOC SCI RES, V22, P361, DOI 10.1006/ssre.1993.1018 SHELTON BA, 1993, J FAM ISSUES, V14, P401, DOI 10.1177/019251393014003004 BEGGS JM, 1993, J APPL SOC PSYCHOL, V23, P1435, DOI 10.1111/j.1559-1816.1993.tb01042.x Thorne B., 1993, GENDER PLAY GIRLS BO WILLIAMS CL, 1992, SOC PROBL, V39, P253, DOI 10.1525/sp.1992.39.3.03x0034h Reskin BF, 1990, JOB QUEUES GENDER QU HARDESTY C, 1989, J MARRIAGE FAM, V51, P253, DOI 10.2307/352385 Hochschild A., 1989, 2 SHIFT Williams Christine, 1989, GENDER DIFFERENCES W SORENSEN A, 1987, AM J SOCIOL, V93, P659, DOI 10.1086/228792 West C, 1987, GENDER SOC, V1, P125, DOI 10.1177/0891243287001002002 SECCOMBE K, 1986, J MARRIAGE FAM, V48, P839, DOI 10.2307/352577 Reskin Barbara F, 1986, WOMENS WORK MENS WOR Berk Sarah F., 1985, GENDER FACTORY APPOR BERK RA, 1978, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V6, P431, DOI 10.1177/004912417800600402 SHINAR EH, 1975, J VOCAT BEHAV, V7, P99, DOI 10.1016/0001-8791(75)90037-8 NR 59 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD JAN PY 2012 VL 117 IS 4 BP 1029 EP 1072 DI 10.1086/662649 PG 44 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 899XN UT WOS:000300850100001 ER PT J AU Steinman, E AF Steinman, Erich TI Settler Colonial Power and the American Indian Sovereignty Movement: Forms of Domination, Strategies of Transformation SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID COLLECTIVE ACTION; CIVIL-RIGHTS; POLITICS; IDENTITY; ORGANIZATIONS; INSTITUTIONS; PATRONAGE; NATIONS; CULTURE; STATE AB The article extends the multi-institutional model of power and change through an analysis of the American Indian Sovereignty Movement. Drawing upon cultural models of the state, and articulating institutionalist conceptions of political opportunities and resources, the analysis demonstrates that this framework can be applied to challenges addressing the state as well as nonstate fields. The rational-legal diminishment of tribal rights, bureaucratic paternalism, commonsense views of tribes as racial/ethnic minorities, and the binary construction of American and Indian as oppositional identities diminished the appeal of "contentious" political action. Instead, to establish tribes' status as sovereign nations, tribal leaders aggressively enacted infrastructural power, transposed favorable legal rulings across social fields to legitimize sovereignty discourses, and promoted a pragmatic coexistence with state and local governments. Identifying the United States as a settler colonial society, the study suggests that a decolonizing framework is more apt than racial/ethnicity approaches in conceptualizing the struggle of American Indians. C1 Pitzer Coll, Claremont, CA 91711 USA. RP Steinman, E (reprint author), Pitzer Coll, Claremont, CA 91711 USA CR VERACINI L, 2011, SETTLER COLONIAL STU, V1, P1 Steinman E, 2011, CITIZENSHIP STUD, V15, P57, DOI 10.1080/13621025.2011.534927 Veracini L, 2010, CAMB IMP POST-COL ST, P1, DOI 10.1057/9780230299191 Rojas F, 2009, CONTEMP SOCIOL, V38, P597 Bernstein M, 2009, SOC PROBL, V56, P722, DOI 10.1525/sp.2008.56.4.722 Auyero J, 2009, LAT AM POLIT SOC, V51, P1 Walters KL, 2009, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V99, pS71, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.2008.136127 Hall Thomas D, 2009, INDIGENOUS PEOPLES G Polletta F, 2008, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V619, P78, DOI 10.1177/0002716208320042 Champagne D, 2008, AM BEHAV SCI, V51, P1672, DOI 10.1177/0002764208318925 Fenelon JV, 2008, AM BEHAV SCI, V51, P1867, DOI 10.1177/0002764208318938 Armstrong EA, 2008, SOCIOL THEOR, V26, P74, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9558.2008.00319.x Goldstein Alyosha, 2008, S ATLANTIC Q, V107 Wilkins D. E., 2007, AM INDIAN POLITICS A Bruyneel Kevin, 2007, 3 SPACE SOVEREIGNTY Epstein S, 2007, INCLUSION POLITICS D Witmer R, 2007, SOC SCI J, V44, P127, DOI 10.1016/j.soscij.2006.12.010 McCool Daniel, 2007, NATIVE VOTE AM INDIA Powell Walter W., 2007, NEW I UNPUB Polletta F, 2006, MOBILIZATION, V11, P475 BOBO LAWRENCE, 2006, PREJUDICE POLITICS G Dudas JR, 2005, LAW SOC REV, V39, P723, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-5893.2005.00243.x Steinman EW, 2005, LAW SOC REV, V39, P759, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-5893.2005.00244.x Ostrom E, 2005, UNDERSTANDING INSTITUTIONAL DIVERSITY, P1 Wilkinson CF, 2005, BLOOD STRUGGLE RISE Biernacki R., 2005, REMAKING MODERNITY P, P75 Adams Julia, 2005, REMAKING MODERNITY P, P1 Lawrence Bonita, 2005, SOCIAL JUSTICE J CRI, V32, P120 Turner Charles, 2005, POLITICS MINOR CONCE Champagne Duane, 2005, WICAZO SA REV, V20, P21, DOI 10.1353/wic.2005.0019 Riding In James, 2005, WICAZO SA REV J NA 2, V20, P5 Bird Michael Yellow, 2005, INDIGENOUS EYES ONLY Steinman E, 2004, PUBLIUS J FEDERALISM, V34, P95 Bruyneel K, 2004, STUD AM POLIT DEV, V18, P30 Polletta F, 2004, RES SOC MOV CONFL CH, V25, P161, DOI 10.1016/S0163-786X(04)25007-8 Mihesuah Devon A, 2004, INDIGENIZING ACAD TR Roger Friedland, 2004, MATTERS CULTURE CULT, P1 Yellow Bird Michael, 2004, WICAZO SA REV, V19, P33, DOI DOI 10.1353/WIC.2004.0013 Riding In James, 2004, WICAZO SA REV J NA 1, V19, P5 Bernstein M, 2003, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V46, P353, DOI 10.1525/sop.2003.46.3.353 Niezen Ronald, 2003, ORIGINS INDIGENISM H Mihesuah Devon A, 2003, AM INDIAN Q, V27, P807, DOI 10.1353/aiq.2004.0084 Campbell JL, 2002, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V28, P21, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.28.110601.141111 Skrentny John David, 2002, MINORITY RIGHTS REVO Blumm MC, 2002, SACRIFICING SALMON L Polletta Francesca, 2002, FREEDOM IS ENDLESS M Binder Amy J., 2002, CONTENTIOUS CURRICUL Fetzer Philip L, 2002, NATIVE AM, P169 Scott Richard W, 2002, ORG POLICY NATURAL E, P451 Silvern Stephen, 2002, TRIBES STATES GEOGRA, P119 Fligstein N, 2001, SOCIOL THEOR, V19, P105, DOI 10.1111/0735-2751.00132 McAdam D., 2001, DYNAMICS CONTENTION Scott Richard, 2001, I ORG Swidler A, 2001, TALK LOVE CULTURE MA Havemann Paul, 2001, INDIGENOUS PEOPLES R Biolsi Thomas, 2001, DEADLIEST ENEMIES LA Dean Kotlowski, 2001, NIXONS CIVIL RIGHTS Wilkins David E., 2001, STANFORD LAW POLICY, V12, P223 Lomawaima K. Tsianina, 2001, UNEVEN GROUND AM IND Ganz M, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P1003, DOI 10.1086/210398 Harmon Alexandra, 2000, INDIANS MAKING ETHNI Will Kymlicka, 2000, POLITICAL THEORY RIG, P216 Anderson R, 2000, SEATTLE TIMES 0418 Polletta F, 1999, THEOR SOC, V28, P1, DOI 10.1023/A:1006941408302 Alfred T, 1999, PEACE POWER RIGHTEOU Steinmetz G., 1999, STATE CULTURE STATE, P1 Clemens ES, 1999, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V25, P441, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.25.1.441 Wolfe Patrick, 1999, SETTLER COLONIALISM Adams J., 1999, STATE CULTURE STATE, P98 Ulrich Roberta, 1999, EMPTY NETS INDIANS D EPA (Environmental Protection Agency), 1999, FED REG, V64, P8247 Porter Robert B., 1999, HARV BLACKLETTER LJ, V15, P107 Moore Kelly., 1999, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS MAT, P97 Alvin Josephy, 1999, RED POWER AM INDIANS Bourdieu Pierre, 1999, STATE CULTURE STATE, P53 Tilly Charles, 1999, STATE CULTURE STATE, P407 Morris Barbara, 1999, SW POL SCI ASS M APR Giugni Marco, 1998, CONTENTION DEMOCRACY, P81 Clemens Elisabeth S, 1998, CONTENTION DEMOCRACY, P109 LeDuff Charlie, 1998, NY TIMES 1109 Castile George P., 1998, SHOW HEART NATIVE AM Lopach James, 1998, TRIBAL GOVT TODAY PO Johnson RW, 1997, WASH LAW REV, V72, P1021 Clemens Elisabeth S., 1997, PEOPLES LOBBY ORG IN Troy Johnson, 1997, AM INDIAN ACTIVISM A Wilkins David E., 1997, AM INDIAN SOVEREIGNT Fenelon James V, 1997, J WORLD SYSTEMS RES, V3, P259 Strickland Rennard., 1997, TONTOS REVENGE REFLE Sewell WH, 1996, THEOR SOC, V25, P841, DOI 10.1007/BF00159818 Fligstein N, 1996, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P1, DOI 10.1086/230907 Moore K, 1996, AM J SOCIOL, V101, P1592, DOI 10.1086/230868 Cornell S, 1996, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V19, P265 Epstein Steven, 1996, IMPURE SCI AIDS ACTI Baylor T, 1996, SOC SCI J, V33, P241, DOI 10.1016/S0362-3319(96)90021-X Wendt Alexander, 1996, CULTURE NATL SECURIT, P33 Skrentny John, 1996, IRONIES AFFIRMATIVE Nagel J, 1995, AM SOCIOL REV, V60, P947, DOI 10.2307/2096434 CRAWFORD SES, 1995, AM POLIT SCI REV, V89, P582, DOI 10.2307/2082975 GAMSON J, 1995, SOC PROBL, V42, P390, DOI 10.1525/sp.1995.42.3.03x0104z Stasiulis D, 1995, UNSETTLING SETTLER S Pommersheim Frank, 1995, BRAIDS FEATHERS AM I Harbison John S, 1995, ND L REV, V71, P473 Prucha F., 1994, AM INDIAN TREATIES H Omi M., 1994, RACIAL FORMATION US McCann Michael, 1994, RIGHTS WORK PAY EQUI Bresette Walt, 1994, WALLEYE WARRIORS EFF Wilkins David E., 1994, WICAZO SA REV, V10, P1, DOI 10.2307/1409305 Mark Sproule-Jones, 1993, GOVT WORK Wilkerson Bill, 1993, WORKING EFFECTIVELY, P10 SEWELL WH, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1 Hauptman Lawrence, 1992, EXILED LAND FREE DEM Biolsi Thomas, 1992, ORG LAKOTA POLITICAL Castile George P., 1992, STATE RESERVATION NE, P165 Ryser Rudolph, 1992, ANTIINDIAN MOVEMENT Grossman Zoltan, 1992, HATE GROUPS COME TOW MITCHELL T, 1991, AM POLIT SCI REV, V85, P77, DOI 10.2307/1962879 Friedland R., 1991, NEW I ORG ANAL, P232 DiMaggio P, 1991, NEW I ORG ANAL Newton Nell Jessup, 1991, AM INDIAN LAW CASES Drinnon Richard., 1990, FACING W METAPHYSICS National Conference of State Legislatures, 1990, FIND COMM GROUND GOV Gross Emma R, 1989, CONT FEDERAL POLICY Cornell Stephen, 1988, RETURN NATIVE AM IND Laumann Edward O., 1987, ORG STATE SOCIAL CHO Ball Milner S, 1987, AM BAR FDN RES J, V12, P1 Wilkinson Charles F., 1987, AM INDIANS TIME LAW Meyer John W, 1987, I STRUCTURE CONSTITU, P12 JENKINS JC, 1986, AM SOCIOL REV, V51, P812, DOI 10.2307/2095369 Mann Michael, 1986, SOURCES SOCIAL POWER, VI Snipp Matthew C., 1986, AM J ECON SOCIOL, V45, P145 Philp Kenneth, 1986, INDIAN SELF RULE 1 H Cohen Fay G., 1986, TREATIES TRIAL CONTI Deloria V., 1985, TRAIL BROKEN TREATIE DeLaCruz Joseph, 1985, OUR PEOPLE OUR HOMEL MORRIS ALDON D., 1984, ORIGINS CIVIL RIGHTS Deloria V. Jr., 1984, NATIONS FUTURE AM IN HAINES HH, 1984, SOC PROBL, V32, P31, DOI 10.1525/sp.1984.32.1.03a00030 Evans Peter, 1984, BRINGING STATE BACK, P3 Ruckelshaus William, 1984, EPA POLICY ADM ENV P Commission on State Tribal Relations, 1984, HDB STAT TRIB REL Deloria Jr V, 1983, AM INDIANS AM JUSTIC Reagan Ronald, 1983, STATEMENT INDIAN POL Wassaja (Wassaja: The National Indian Newspaper), 1983, WASSAJA NATL IND JUL Skowronek S., 1982, BUILDING NEW AM STAT McAdam Douglas, 1982, POLITICAL PROCESS DE Ryser Rudolph, 1982, SOLVING INTERGOVERNM Quinault Indian Nation, 1982, TRIB STAT CONFL TRIB Forbes Jack D, 1981, NATIVE AM NIXON PRES Foucault Michel, 1980, POWER KNOWLEDGE SELE Lipsky M., 1980, STREET LEVEL BUREAUC Anders Gary, 1980, J ECON ISSUES, V14, P693 Lawrence Russel, 1980, ROAD INDIAN TRIBES P NCAI (National Congress of American Indians), 1979, 36 ANN SESS Evans Sara, 1979, PERSONAL POLITICS Foucault M, 1978, HIST SEXUALITY Foucault Michel, 1977, DISCIPLINE PUNISH BI U.S. Civil Rights Commission, 1977, HEAR US COMM CIV RIG Washington Council of Tribal Governments, 1976, TRIB GOV WASH UNPUB NCAI (National Congress of American Indians), 1974, AM IND DECL SOV Arizona Commission of Indian Affairs, 1974, SOV INT REL AR IND T Lurie Nancy, 1972, AM INDIAN TODAY, P295 Steiner Stan, 1968, NEW INDIANS Weber M., 1946, M WEBER ESSAYS SOCIO NR 163 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD JAN PY 2012 VL 117 IS 4 BP 1073 EP 1130 DI 10.1086/662708 PG 58 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 899XN UT WOS:000300850100002 ER PT J AU Cole, WM AF Cole, Wade M. TI Human Rights as Myth and Ceremony? Reevaluating the Effectiveness of Human Rights Treaties, 1981-2007 SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID INTERNATIONAL HUMAN-RIGHTS; ECONOMIC-DEVELOPMENT; POLITICAL-INSTITUTIONS; EXPLAINING COMMITMENT; PERSONAL INTEGRITY; GLOBAL ANALYSIS; NATION-STATE; GOOD-NEWS; WORLD; REPRESSION AB Much research has shown human rights treaties to be ineffective or even counterproductive, often contributing to greater levels of abuse among countries that ratify them. This article reevaluates the effect of four core human rights treaties on a variety of human rights outcomes. Unlike previous studies, it disaggregates treaty membership to examine the effect of relatively "stronger" and "weaker" commitments. Two-stage regression analyses that control for the endogeneity of treaty membership show that stronger commitments in the form of optional provisions that allow states and individuals to complain about human rights abuses are often associated with improved practices. The article discusses the scholarly and practical implications of these findings. C1 Univ Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA. RP Cole, WM (reprint author), Univ Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA CR Cole WM, 2011, SOC SCI RES, V40, P985, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2010.10.003 Cole Wade M, 2011, UNCOMMON SCH GLOBAL Frank DJ, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P867, DOI 10.1177/0003122410388493 Clark R, 2010, SOCIOL QUART, V51, P65 Bradley CA, 2010, CHIN J INT LAW, V9, P321, DOI 10.1093/chinesejil/jmq014 Cingranelli DL, 2010, HUM RIGHTS QUART, V32, P401 Cole WM, 2010, J HUM RIGHTS, V9, P303, DOI 10.1080/14754835.2010.501264 World Bank, 2010, PROP SEATS HELD WOM Cole WM, 2009, SOCIOL FORUM, V24, P563, DOI 10.1111/j.1573-7861.2009.01120.x Frank DJ, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P272 Powell EJ, 2009, INT STUD QUART, V53, P149, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-2478.2008.01527.x Hafner-Burton Emilie M., 2009, FORCED BE GOOD WHY T Lebovic JH, 2009, J PEACE RES, V46, P79, DOI 10.1177/0022343308098405 Simmons Beth A., 2009, MOBILIZING HUMAN RIG Ramirez Francisco O, 2009, MULTICULTURAL ED REV, V1, P29 Wotipka CM, 2008, SOCIOL FORUM, V23, P724, DOI 10.1111/j.1573-7861.2008.00092.x Vreeland JR, 2008, INT ORGAN, V62, P65, DOI 10.1017/S002081830808003X Hafner-Burton EM, 2008, INT ORGAN, V62, P689, DOI 10.1017/S0020818308080247 World Bank, 2008, WORLD DEV IND Hafner-Burton EM, 2008, INT SOCIOL, V23, P115, DOI 10.1177/0268580907084388 Richards David L., 2008, SHORT VARIABLE DESCR Ramirez Francisco O, 2008, GLOBAL DIFFUSION MAR, P303, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511755941.008 Simmons Beth A, 2008, OXFORD HDB LAW POLIT, P187 Hathaway OA, 2007, J CONFLICT RESOLUT, V51, P588, DOI 10.1177/0022002707303046 Hafner-Burton EM, 2007, J PEACE RES, V44, P407, DOI 10.1177/0022343307078942 Neumayer E, 2007, J LEGAL STUD, V36, P397, DOI 10.1086/511894 Marshall Monty, 2007, POLITY 4 PROJECT DAT Goodliffe J, 2006, J POLIT, V68, P358 Swaine Edward T., 2006, YALE J INT L, V31, P307 Neumayer E, 2005, J CONFLICT RESOLUT, V49, P925, DOI 10.1177/0022002705281667 Von Stein J, 2005, AM POLIT SCI REV, V99, P611 Simmons BA, 2005, AM POLIT SCI REV, V99, P623 Cole WM, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P472 Hafner-Burton EA, 2005, INT ORGAN, V59, P593, DOI 10.1017/S0020818305050216 Hafner-Burton EM, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P1373 Melander E, 2005, J PEACE RES, V42, P149, DOI 10.1177/0022343305050688 Landman Todd, 2005, PROTECTING HUMAN RIG Goldsmith Jack, 2005, LIMITS INT LAW Minorities at Risk Project, 2005, DISCR DAT Schofer E, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P730, DOI 10.2307/1519760 Alesina A, 2003, J ECON GROWTH, V8, P155, DOI 10.1023/A:1024471506938 Fearon JD, 2003, J ECON GROWTH, V8, P195, DOI 10.1023/A:1024419522867 Hathaway OA, 2003, STANFORD LAW REV, V55, P1821 Goodman Ryan, 2003, EUR J INT LAW, V13, P171, DOI 10.1093/ejil/14.1.171 Scott W.R., 2003, ORG RATIONAL NATURAL Jack Donnelly, 2003, UNIVERSAL HUMAN RIGH Schofer Evan, 2003, SCI MODERN WORLD POL Goodman R, 2002, AM J INT LAW, V96, P531, DOI 10.2307/3062161 Hathaway OA, 2002, YALE LAW J, V111, P1935, DOI 10.2307/797642 Keith LC, 2002, POLIT RES QUART, V55, P111, DOI 10.2307/3088068 Wooldridge Jeffrey M., 2002, ECONOMETRIC ANAL CRO Hwang Hokyu, 2002, INT SOCIOLOGY, V14, P481 Angrist JD, 2001, J ECON PERSPECT, V15, P69, DOI 10.1257/jep.15.4.69 Beck T, 2001, WORLD BANK ECON REV, V15, P165, DOI 10.1093/wber/15.1.165 Scott W.R, 2001, I ORG Easterly William, 2001, GLOBAL DEV NETWORK G United Nations, 2001, TREAT HDB Sarkees MR, 2000, CONFLICT MANAG PEACE, V18, P123 Zanger SC, 2000, J PEACE RES, V37, P213, DOI 10.1177/0022343300037002006 Frank DJ, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P96, DOI 10.2307/2657291 Poe SC, 1999, INT STUD QUART, V43, P291, DOI 10.1111/0020-8833.00121 Davenport C, 1999, J CONFLICT RESOLUT, V43, P92, DOI 10.1177/0022002799043001006 Risse T., 1999, POWER HUMAN RIGHTS I Berkovitch Nitza, 1999, MOTHERHOOD CITIZENSH Keith LC, 1999, J PEACE RES, V36, P95, DOI 10.1177/0022343399036001006 Krasner Stephen D., 1999, SOVEREIGNTY ORG HYPO Barrett D., 1999, CONSTRUCTING WORLD C, P198 Beck N, 1998, AM J POLIT SCI, V42, P1260, DOI 10.2307/2991857 Finnemore M, 1998, INT ORGAN, V52, P887, DOI 10.1162/002081898550789 March JG, 1998, INT ORGAN, V52, P943, DOI 10.1162/002081898550699 Keck M., 1998, ACTIVISTS BORDERS TR Ramirez FO, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P735, DOI 10.2307/2657357 Meyer JW, 1997, INT ORGAN, V51, P623, DOI 10.1162/002081897550474 Meyer JW, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P144 Downs GW, 1996, INT ORGAN, V50, P379 Wendt Alexander, 1996, CULTURE NATL SECURIT, P33 Lijnzaad Liesbeth, 1995, RESERVATIONS UN HUMA Craven Matthew C. R., 1995, INT COVENANT EC SOCI Machiavelli Niccolo, 1995, PRINCE Inter-Parliamentary Union, 1995, WOM PARL 1945 1995 W POE SC, 1994, AM POLIT SCI REV, V88, P853, DOI 10.2307/2082712 BURKHART RE, 1994, AM POLIT SCI REV, V88, P903, DOI 10.2307/2082715 HELLIWELL JF, 1994, BRIT J POLIT SCI, V24, P225 HENDERSON CW, 1993, SOC SCI QUART, V74, P322 CHAYES A, 1993, INT ORGAN, V47, P175 MEYER JW, 1992, SOCIOL EDUC, V65, P128, DOI 10.2307/2112679 Meyer John W, 1992, ORG ENV RITUAL RATIO, P129 CLARK B, 1991, AM J INT LAW, V85, P281, DOI 10.2307/2203063 HENDERSON CW, 1991, J CONFLICT RESOLUT, V35, P120, DOI 10.1177/0022002791035001007 BENAVOT A, 1991, AM SOCIOL REV, V56, P85, DOI 10.2307/2095675 MITCHELL NJ, 1988, WORLD POLIT, V40, P476, DOI 10.2307/2010315 Thomas G. M., 1987, I STRUCTURE CONSTITU Meyer John W, 1987, I STRUCTURE CONSTITU, P12 Boli John, 1987, I STRUCTURE CONSTITU DONNELLY J, 1986, INT ORGAN, V40, P599 BOLLEN KA, 1985, AM SOCIOL REV, V50, P438, DOI 10.2307/2095432 MEYER JW, 1977, AM J SOCIOL, V83, P340, DOI 10.1086/226550 JACKMAN RW, 1973, AM J POLIT SCI, V17, P611, DOI 10.2307/2110747 Berger P., 1967, SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION LIPSET SM, 1959, AM POLIT SCI REV, V53, P69, DOI 10.2307/1951731 NR 100 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD JAN PY 2012 VL 117 IS 4 BP 1131 EP 1171 DI 10.1086/662706 PG 41 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 899XN UT WOS:000300850100003 ER PT J AU Choi, SYP David, R AF Choi, Susanne Y. P. David, Roman TI Lustration Systems and Trust: Evidence from Survey Experiments in the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Poland SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE; EASTERN-EUROPE; SOUTH-AFRICA; TRUTH; RECONCILIATION; CEREMONIES; SOCIETIES; DISTRUST; LAWS AB Dealing with personnel inherited from prior regimes in the administration of transitional states is critical for democratic consolidation, a problem traditionally addressed by the dichotomy of continuation or dismissal. However, major organizational innovations to deal with tainted officials appear in postcommunist Central Europe. Using the concept of lustration systems, this study differentiates three archetypes: dismissal, exposure, and confession. The authors propose that each system carries different symbolic meanings, which produce different outcomes for citizens' trust in government and in tainted officials. The hypothesized effects of different lustration systems on trust are tested by an experiment embedded in nationwide representative surveys conducted in the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Poland. The results show that dismissal and confession increase citizens' trust in government and trust in tainted officials. However, exposure reduces citizens' trust in tainted officials. C1 [Choi, Susanne Y. P.] Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Gender Res Ctr, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China. [Choi, Susanne Y. P.] Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Ctr Chinese Family Studies, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China. [David, Roman] Newcastle Univ, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE1 7RU, Tyne & Wear, England. RP Choi, SYP (reprint author), Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Gender Res Ctr, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China CR Horne CM, 2009, LAW SOCIAL INQUIRY, V34, P713 Goode Erich, 2009, MORAL PANICS SOCIAL Stan L, 2008, BASEES-ROUT SER RUSS, P1 Hosmanova Iva, 2008, IDNES 0512 Levi Margaret, 2007, COOPERATION TRUST de Greiff Pablo, 2007, JUSTICE PREVENTION V Czarnota Adam, 2007, JUSTICE PREVENTION V, P222 Barrett Elizabeth, 2007, JUSTICE PREVENTION V, P260 Priban Jiri, 2007, JUSTICE PREVENTION V, P308 Druckman JN, 2006, AM POLIT SCI REV, V100, P627, DOI 10.1017/S0003055406062514 Zhong CB, 2006, SCIENCE, V313, P1451, DOI 10.1126/science.1130726 David R, 2006, GOV OPPOS, V41, P347, DOI 10.1111/j.1477-7053.2006.00183.x David R, 2006, J CONFLICT RESOLUT, V50, P339, DOI 10.1177/0022002706286950 Romaszewski Zbigniew, 2006, GAZETA WYBORZCA 0923 Hardin Russell, 2006, TRUST David R, 2005, HUM RIGHTS QUART, V27, P392, DOI 10.1353/hrq.2005.0016 Gibson JL, 2004, AM J POLIT SCI, V48, P201, DOI 10.1111/j.0092-5853.2004.00065.x Nedelsky N, 2004, THEOR SOC, V33, P65, DOI 10.1023/B:RYSO.0000021428.22638.e2 Elster Jon, 2004, CLOSING BOOKS TRANSI Posner EA, 2004, HARVARD LAW REV, V117, P761, DOI 10.2307/4093461 Kornai J, 2004, POLIT EVOL INST CHAN, pXIV Horne CM, 2004, POLIT EVOL INST CHAN, P52 David R, 2003, LAW SOCIAL INQUIRY, V28, P387, DOI 10.1111/j.1747-4469.2003.tb00197.x Williams Kieran, 2003, J COMMUNIST STUDIES, V19, P1, DOI 10.1080/13523270300660026 Murphy Jeffrey, 2003, GETTING EVEN FORGIVE Gouws Amanda, 2003, OVERCOMING INTOLERAN Silverstein Helena, 2003, INT J SEMIOTICS LAW, V16, P407, DOI 10.1023/B:SELA.0000013848.67992.f9 Douglas Mary, 2003, PURITY DANGER ANAL C Vasarhelyi Maria, 2003, TRANSITION LINE 0402 Gibson JL, 2002, AM J POLIT SCI, V46, P540, DOI 10.2307/3088398 Letki N, 2002, EUROPE-ASIA STUD, V54, P529, DOI 10.1080/096681302201391541 Szczerbiak A, 2002, EUROPE-ASIA STUD, V54, P553, DOI 10.1080/09668130220139163 Calhoun N, 2002, E EUR POLIT SOC, V16, P494, DOI 10.1177/088832540201600207 Uslaner E., 2002, MORAL FDN TRUST Grzymala-Busse A., 2002, REDEEMING COMMUNIST Govier Trudy, 2002, FORGIVENESS REVENGE Boross Peter, 2002, ORSZAGGYULESI NAPLO Tomiuc Eugen, 2002, RFE RL 0627 Hayner Priscilla B, 2001, UNSPEAKABLE TRUTHS C Eyal G, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P1121, DOI 10.1086/320300 Rose-Ackerman S, 2001, KYKLOS, V54, P415, DOI 10.1111/j.0023-5962.2001.00161.x Eyal G, 2000, THEOR SOC, V29, P49, DOI 10.1023/A:1007086330378 Teitel Ruti, 2000, TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE Zacek Pavel, 2000, BOJE MINULOST Salivarova-Skvorecka Zdena, 2000, OSOCENI PRAVIDE PRIB Zybertowicz Andrzej, 2000, PRIVATIZING POLICE S Brunner Georg, 2000, CONSTITUTIONAL JUDIC Gibson JL, 1999, AM POLIT SCI REV, V93, P501, DOI 10.2307/2585571 Tutu Desmond, 1999, NO FUTURE FORGIVENES Boed R, 1999, COLUMBIA J TRANS LAW, V37, P357 Sztompka P, 1999, TRUST SOCIOLOGICAL T Misztal BA, 1999, ARCH EUR SOCIOL, V40, P31 Tucker A, 1999, ARCH EUR SOCIOL, V40, P56 Gillis Mark, 1999, RULE LAW CENTRAL EUR, P56 Hetherington MJ, 1998, AM POLIT SCI REV, V92, P791, DOI 10.2307/2586304 Braithwaite V., 1998, TRUST GOVERNANCE Townsley Eleanor, 1998, MAKING CAPITALISM CA Hardin Russell, 1998, TRUST GOVERNANCE, P9 Daunton Martin, 1998, TRUST GOVERNANCE, P102 Tyler Tom R, 1998, TRUST GOVERNANCE, P269 Mishler W, 1997, J POLIT, V59, P418, DOI 10.2307/2998171 Offe C., 1997, VARIETIES TRANSITION Scheppele Kim Lane, 1997, TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE, P155 Ellis MS, 1996, LAW CONTEMP PROBL, V59, P181, DOI 10.2307/1192198 Welsh HA, 1996, EUROPE-ASIA STUD, V48, P413, DOI 10.1080/09668139608412356 Kahan DM, 1996, U CHICAGO LAW REV, V63, P591, DOI 10.2307/1600237 Sniderman PM, 1996, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V22, P377, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.22.1.377 Siklova Jirina, 1996, E EUROPEAN CONSTITUT, V5, P57 LOS M, 1995, LAW SOCIAL INQUIRY, V20, P117, DOI 10.1111/j.1747-4469.1995.tb00684.x KRITZ NEIL J., 1995, TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE Roht-Arriaza Naomi, 1995, IMPUNITY HUMAN RIGHT, P13 GAUCK J, 1994, DAEDALUS, V123, P277 RONATAS A, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V100, P40, DOI 10.1086/230499 BRAITHWAITE J, 1994, BRIT J CRIMINOL, V34, P139 MORAN JP, 1994, COMMUNIS POST-COMMUN, V27, P95, DOI 10.1016/0967-067X(94)90032-9 Schwartz Herman, 1994, TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE, V1, P461 Havel Vaclav, 1993, J DEMOCR, V4, P20 Klingsberg Ethan, 1993, TRUTH JUSTICE DELICA CEU (Central European University), 1992, DEV PART SYST EL AL Giddens A., 1991, MODERNITY SELF IDENT Huntington S., 1991, 3 WAVE DEMOCRATIZATI Kavan Jan, 1991, COMMUNICATION 1003 Kertzer David, 1988, RITUAL POLITICS POWE LINK BG, 1987, AM J SOCIOL, V92, P1461, DOI 10.1086/228672 Wuthnow R., 1987, MEANING MORAL ORDER Parker R., 1983, MIASMA POLLUTION PUR Herz JohnH, 1982, DICTATORSHIP DEMOCRA Di Palma Giuseppe, 1982, DICTATORSHIP DEMOCRA, P107 Meyer J. W., 1977, AM J SOCIOL, V83, P440 BERGESEN AJ, 1977, AM SOCIOL REV, V42, P220, DOI 10.2307/2094602 PARRY G, 1976, BRIT J POLIT SCI, V6, P129 Scheingold Stuart A., 1974, POLITICS RIGHTS LAWY Novick Peter, 1968, RESISTANCE VERSUS VI Edelman M, 1964, SYMBOLIC USES POLITI Cleveland Harlan, 1962, ETHICS BIGNESS SCI A, P61 Ogilvie Robert M, 1961, JRS, V51, P31, DOI 10.2307/298833 GARFINKEL H, 1956, AM J SOCIOL, V61, P420, DOI 10.1086/221800 Simmel G., 1950, SOCIOLOGY G SIMMEL Lewis Charlton T, 1966, LATIN DICT NR 99 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD JAN PY 2012 VL 117 IS 4 BP 1172 EP 1201 DI 10.1086/662648 PG 30 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 899XN UT WOS:000300850100004 ER PT J AU Koopmans, R Michalowski, I Waibel, S AF Koopmans, Ruud Michalowski, Ines Waibel, Stine TI Citizenship Rights for Immigrants: National Political Processes and Cross-National Convergence in Western Europe, 1980-2008 SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID POLICY; COUNTRIES; GERMANY; PARTIES; MODELS; STATES; UNION AB Immigrant citizenship rights in the nation-state reference both theories of cross-national convergence and the resilience of national political processes. This article investigates European countries' attribution of rights to immigrants: Have these rights become more inclusive and more similar across countries? Are they affected by EU membership, the role of the judiciary, the party in power, the size of the immigrant electorate, or pressure exerted by anti-immigrant parties? Original data on 10 European countries, 1980-2008, reveal no evidence for cross-national convergence. Rights tended to become more inclusive until 2002, but stagnated afterward. Electoral changes drive these trends: growth of the immigrant electorate led to expansion, but countermobilization by right-wing parties slowed or reversed liberalizations. These electoral mechanisms are in turn shaped by long-standing policy traditions, leading to strong path dependence and the reproduction of preexisting cross-national differences. C1 [Koopmans, Ruud; Michalowski, Ines; Waibel, Stine] Wissensch Zentrum Berlin Sozialforsch WZB, Berlin, Germany. RP Koopmans, R (reprint author), Wissensch Zentrum Berlin Sozialforsch WZB, Berlin, Germany CR Kesler C, 2010, CAN J POLIT SCI, V43, P319, DOI 10.1017/S0008423910000077 Janoski T., 2010, IRONIES CITIZENSHIP Ersboll Eva, 2010, REDEFINITION BELONGI OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), 2010, INT MIGR OUTL SOP 20 [Anonymous], 2010, COUNTR RES Howard M.M., 2009, POLITICS CITIZENSHIP Maussen Marcel, 2009, CONSTRUCTION MOSQUES Plumper T, 2009, J EUR PUBLIC POLICY, V16, P990, DOI 10.1080/13501760903226724 Comtat Emmanuelle, 2009, PIEDS NOIRS POLITIQU Bleich Erik, 2009, MUSLIMS STATE POST 9 Solis Conseil, 2009, PRES 9 POP VIV HEX O Michalowski Ines, 2009, 2009702 WZB SP IV Bale T, 2008, J EUR PUBLIC POLICY, V15, P315, DOI 10.1080/13501760701847341 Kneip Sascha, 2008, EU STAATEN VERGLEICH, P631 United Nations Population Division, 2008, INT MIGR STOCK 2008 OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), 2008, INT MIGR OUTL SOP 20 ODMALM P, 2007, REPRESENTATION, V43, P19, DOI 10.1080/00344890601176992 Joppke C, 2007, WEST EUR POLIT, V30, P1, DOI 10.1080/01402380601019613 Sprangers Arno H., 2007, TWEE EEUWEN NEDERLAN, P19 Schain MA, 2006, WEST EUR POLIT, V29, P270, DOI 10.1080/01402380500512619 Freeman GP, 2006, WEST EUR POLIT, V29, P227, DOI 10.1080/01402380500512585 Minkenberg M, 2006, PATTERNS PREJUDICE, V40, P25, DOI 10.1080/00313220500482662 Laurence J, 2006, INTEGRATING ISLAM PO MPG, 2006, MIGR INT POL IND MIP Baubock Rainer, 2006, ACQUISITION LOSS NAT, V1 Baubock Rainer, 2006, COUNTRY ANAL POLICIE, V2 Groenendijk K, 2006, EUR J MIGR LAW, V8, P215, DOI 10.1163/157181606777975003 Howard Marc Morje, 2006, PERSPECTIVES POLITIC, V4, P443 Howard MM, 2005, INT MIGR REV, V39, P697, DOI 10.1111/j.1747-7379.2005.tb00285.x Koopmans R., 2005, CONTESTED CITIZENSHI Kofman E, 2004, J ETHN MIGR STUD, V30, P243, DOI 10.1080/1369183042000200687 Davy Ulrike, 2004, AUF WEG RECHTSGLEICH, P83 Joppke Christian, 2004, CANADIAN DIVERSITY, V3, P85 Banting Keith, 2004, 33 QUEENS U KINGST S Wust Andreas M., 2003, POLITIK ZEITGESCHI B, V52, P29 Schnapper Dominique, 2003, INTEGRATION IMMIGRAN, P253 Benhabib S, 2002, CLAIMS CULTURE EQUAL Vink MP, 2001, J COMMON MARK STUD, V39, P875, DOI 10.1111/1468-5965.00335 Joppke C, 2001, COMP POLIT STUD, V34, P339, DOI 10.1177/0010414001034004001 Hansen R., 2001, EUROPEAN NATL CITIZE Botecheva Liliana, 2001, INT STUDIES Q, V45, P1 Checkel Jeffrey, 2001, TRANSFORMING EUROPE, P180 Hagedorn Heike, 2001, WER DARF MITGLIED WE Faist T., 2000, VOLUME DYNAMICS INT Lijphart A, 1999, PATTERNS DEMOCRACY G Held David, 1999, GLOBAL TRANSFORMATIO Freeman G.P., 1998, J ETHN MIGR STUD, V24, P769 Sassen Saskia, 1998, CHALLENGE NATION STA, P49 Beck Ulrich, 1998, POLITIK GLOBALISIERU Soysal Yasemin Nuhoglu, 1998, CITIZENSHIP DEBATES, P189 Young Marion Iris, 1998, CITIZENSHIP DEBATES, P263 Soysal YN, 1997, THEOR SOC, V26, P509, DOI 10.1023/A:1006886630358 Wiener A, 1997, THEOR SOC, V26, P529, DOI 10.1023/A:1006809913519 Hofinger Christoph, 1997, NEW COMMUNITY, V23, P271 Lederer Harald W., 1997, MIGRATION INTEGRATIO Guiraudon Virginie, 1997, POLICY CHANGE GILDED Jacobson David, 1997, RIGHTS BORDERS IMMIG Koopmans Ruud, 1997, SOCIOLOGIE NATIONALI, P295 Perlmutter T, 1996, INT MIGR REV, V30, P375 FREEMAN GP, 1995, INT MIGR REV, V29, P881, DOI 10.2307/2547729 Kymlicka Will, 1995, MULTICULTURAL CITIZE Kriesi H, 1995, NEW SOCIAL MOVEMENTS Alivizatos Nicos, 1995, PARLIAMENTS MAJORITY, P566 Ireland P., 1994, POLICY CHALLENGE ETH Martin Philip, 1994, CONTROLLING IMMIGRAT Miller Mark J., 1993, AGE MIGRATION INT PO Meehan Elizabeth, 1993, CITIZENSHIP EUROPEAN Brubaker Rogers, 1992, CITIZENSHIP NATIONHO Olzak S, 1992, DYNAMICS ETHNIC COMP NR 69 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD JAN PY 2012 VL 117 IS 4 BP 1202 EP 1245 DI 10.1086/662707 PG 44 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 899XN UT WOS:000300850100005 ER PT J AU Roscigno, VJ AF Roscigno, Vincent J. TI Power, Revisited SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID SOCIAL CLOSURE; MORAL PANICS; INEQUALITY; GENDER; DISCRIMINATION; LEGITIMATION; DIVERSITY; DISCOURSE; EXCHANGE; CULTURE AB Power is a core theoretical construct in the field with amazing utility across substantive areas, levels of analysis and methodologies. Yet, its use along with associated assumptions - assumptions surrounding constraint vs. action and specifically organizational structure and rationality - remain problematic. In this article, and following an overview of important divides on the topic, I develop a dynamic relational theory of power. My framework, which builds on several strands of literature and my own in-depth investigations of workplace discrimination, challenges prevailing top-down conceptions of bureaucratic organizational constraint and rationality (derived from Weber). It also makes explicit the constitutive interplay of structure, culture and action, and provides significant insight into the relational nature of power. Relational, in these regards, entails often-assumed interpersonal interactions but also the capacities of actors to invoke structure (and thus leverage) and legitimate inequality through a two-pronged process of symbolic vilification and amplification. Contemporary bureaucracy and its structural and cultural foundations can provide the leverage for doing so and in a manner whereby hierarchical projects surrounding race, sex, age and social class are systematically reified. C1 Ohio State Univ, Dept Sociol, Columbus, OH 43210 USA. RP Roscigno, VJ (reprint author), Ohio State Univ, Dept Sociol, 238 Townshend Hall,1885 Neil Ave, Columbus, OH 43210 USA EM Roscigno.1@osu.edu CR Light R, 2011, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V634, P39, DOI 10.1177/0002716210388475 TARROW S, 2011, POWER MOVEMENT SOCIA Avent-Holt Dustin, 2011, RELATIONAL INE UNPUB Shenhav Yehouda, 2011, INSTRUMENTAL R UNPUB Guetzkow J, 2010, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V629, P173, DOI 10.1177/0002716209357404 Bonilla-Silva E., 2010, RACISM RACISTS COLOR Harding David J., 2010, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V629, P1 Alon S, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P731 Goffman A, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P339 Gross N, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P358 Roscigno VJ, 2009, SOC FORCES, V87, P1561 Ridgeway CL, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P44 Dobbin F, 2009, INVENTING EQUAL OPPORTUNITY, P1 Morrill C, 2008, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V619, P15, DOI 10.1177/0002716208320241 Kalev A, 2008, ADMIN SCI QUART, V53, P1, DOI 10.2189/asqu.53.1.1 Piven FF, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P1 Clay-Warner Jody, 2008, SOCIAL STRUCTURE EMO, P13 Edelman Lauren, 2008, ORG RULE JUDICIAL DE Bell JM, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P895 Roscigno VJ, 2007, SOC FORCES, V86, P313, DOI 10.1353/sof.2007.0109 Hunt MO, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P390 DiTomaso N, 2007, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V33, P473, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.33.040406.131805 Pager Devah, 2007, MARKED RACE CRIME FI Roscigno V. J., 2007, FACE DISCRIMINATION Roscigno VJ, 2007, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V609, P16, DOI 10.1177/0002716206294898 Kefalas Maria, 2007, PROMISES I CAN KEEP Kalev A, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P589 Roscigno VJ, 2006, SOC FORCES, V84, P2121, DOI 10.1353/sof.2006.0108 Vallas SP, 2006, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P1677, DOI 10.1086/499909 Martin PY, 2006, GENDER WORK ORGAN, V13, P254, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0432.2006.00307.x Feagin J. R., 2006, SYSTEMIC RACISM THEO Tomaskovic-Devey D, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P58 Casciaro T, 2005, ADMIN SCI QUART, V50, P167 McCall PL, 2005, SOCIOL INQ, V75, P273, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2005.00122.x Mizruchi MS, 2004, THEOR SOC, V33, P579, DOI 10.1023/B:RYSO.0000045757.93910.ed McBrier DB, 2004, WORK OCCUPATION, V31, P283, DOI 10.1177/0730888404266383 Martin PY, 2004, SOC FORCES, V82, P1249, DOI 10.1353/sof.2004.0081 Huffman ML, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P902, DOI 10.1086/378928 Cunningham D, 2004, THERE'S SOMETHING HAPPENING HERE: THE NEW LEFT, THE KLAN, AND FBI COUNTERINTELLIGENCE, P1 Reskin BF, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P1, DOI 10.2307/3088900 Feagin J. R., 2003, MANY COSTS RACISM Steinmetz G, 2003, COMP STUD SOC HIST, V45, P41 Roscigno VJ, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P21, DOI 10.2307/2657392 Bauman Zygmun, 2001, MODERNITY HOLOCAUST Benford RD, 2000, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V26, P611, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.26.1.611 Davenport C., 2000, PATHS STATE REPRESSI Stryker R, 2000, RES SOC ORG, V17, P179 McLellan David, 2000, K MARX SELECTED WRIT Ely RJ, 2000, RES ORGAN BEHAV, V22, P103, DOI 10.1016/S0191-3085(00)22004-2 Tilly Charles, 1999, DURABLE INEQUALITY Ridgeway CL, 1999, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V25, P191, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.25.1.191 Zajicek AM, 1998, GENDER SOC, V12, P505, DOI 10.1177/089124398012005002 Jacobs D, 1998, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P837, DOI 10.1086/231291 Smith Dorothy, 1978, MORAL PANICS, V12, P23 Alvarez A, 1997, SOC SCI HIST, V21, P139, DOI 10.2307/1171272 Molm LD, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P113, DOI 10.2307/2657455 Roy W., 1997, SOCIALIZING CAPITAL TomaskovicDevey D, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P565, DOI 10.2307/2096394 Ingersoll RM, 1996, SOCIOL EDUC, V69, P159, DOI 10.2307/2112804 Lawler EJ, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P89, DOI 10.2307/2096408 LOVAGLIA MJ, 1995, SOC FORCES, V74, P123, DOI 10.2307/2580626 ANDERSON CD, 1995, WORK OCCUPATION, V22, P328, DOI 10.1177/0730888495022003005 SUCHMAN MC, 1995, ACAD MANAGE REV, V20, P571, DOI 10.2307/258788 Foucault M., 1995, DISCIPLINE PUNISH BI GOODE E, 1994, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V20, P149, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.20.1.149 Dobbin F., 1994, SOCIOLOGY CULTURE EM, P117 STRYKER R, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V99, P847, DOI 10.1086/230366 BARKER JR, 1993, ADMIN SCI QUART, V38, P408, DOI 10.2307/2393374 IBARRA H, 1993, ADMIN SCI QUART, V38, P277, DOI 10.2307/2393414 HEGTVEDT KA, 1993, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V56, P100, DOI 10.2307/2787000 Tomaskovic-Devey D, 1993, GENDER RACIAL INEQUA Fein Helen, 1993, GENOCIDE SOCIOLOGICA EDELMAN LB, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V97, P1531, DOI 10.1086/229939 Gamson W. A, 1992, TALKING POLITICS Scott James, 1992, DOMINATION ARTS RESI GRISWOLD W, 1992, ACTA SOCIOL, V35, P323 Morris A., 1992, FRONTIERS SOCIAL MOV, P456 Bourdieu P, 1991, LANGUAGE SYMBOLIC PO Powell W.P., 1991, NEW I ORG ANAL Jepperson R. L., 1991, NEW I ORG ANAL, P143 Meyer J.W., 1991, NEW I ORG ANAL, P41 Acker Joan R., 1991, GENDER SOC, V4, P139 STRYKER R, 1990, POLIT SOC, V18, P101, DOI 10.1177/003232929001800105 Bourdieu P., 1990, LOGIC PRACTICE Fligstein N., 1990, TRANSFORMATION CORPO MARGOLIS DR, 1989, THEOR SOC, V18, P387 Clegg S., 1989, FRAMEWORKS POWER BOURDIEU P, 1989, SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY, V7, P14, DOI 10.2307/202060 Schwartz Pepper, 1989, GENDER INTIMATE RELA Smith-Lovin Lynn, 1989, SOC FORCES, V79, P1 Klandermans Bert, 1988, STRUCTURE ACTION COM, P219 Snow David A., 1988, INT SOCIAL MOVEMENT, V1, P197 West C, 1987, GENDER SOC, V1, P125, DOI 10.1177/0891243287001002002 Lieberson Stanley, 1987, MAKING IT COUNT IMPR DELLAFAVE LR, 1986, SOC FORCES, V65, P476 BENYEHUDA N, 1986, SOCIOL QUART, V27, P495, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1986.tb00274.x DELLAFAVE LR, 1986, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V29, P435 Wright EO, 1985, CLASSES KORPI W, 1985, SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY, V3, P31, DOI 10.2307/202223 Bourdieu P, 1984, DISTINCTION SOCIAL C Giddens A., 1984, CONSTITUTION SOC OUT Habermas J, 1984, THEORY COMMUNICATIVE, V1 Lawlet Edward, 1984, ADV GROUP PROCESSES, V1, P1 Gaventa John, 1982, POWER POWERLESSNESS Goffman Erving, 1981, FORMS TALK Aronowitz S., 1981, CRISIS HIST MAT CLAS Foucault Michel, 1980, POWER KNOWLEDGE SELE DELLAFAVE LR, 1980, AM SOCIOL REV, V45, P955 Polsby Nelson W., 1980, COMMUNITY POWER POLI Parkin F, 1979, MARXISM CLASS THEORY Fein Helen, 1979, ACCOUNTING GENOCIDE Wallerstein I., 1979, CAPITALIST WORLD EC Pfeffer J., 1978, EXTERNAL CONTROL ORG Lakatos I., 1978, METHODOLOGY SCI RES, V1 Blau P.M, 1977, INEQUALITY HETEROGEN ZUCKER LG, 1977, AM SOCIOL REV, V42, P726, DOI 10.2307/2094862 Morgan Patrick M., 1977, DETERRENCE CONCEPTUA Feyerabend P., 1975, METHOD OUTLINE ANARC POPE W, 1975, AM SOCIOL REV, V40, P417, DOI 10.2307/2094429 BALDUS B, 1975, CAN J SOCIOL, V1, P179, DOI 10.2307/3339807 Lukes S., 1974, POWER RADICAL VIEW Homans G, 1974, SOCIAL BEHAV ITS ELE ROGERS MF, 1974, AM J SOCIOL, V79, P1418, DOI 10.1086/225708 Habermas Jurgen, 1973, LEGITIMATION CRISIS Duetsch Morton, 1973, RESOLUTION CONFLICT Emerson RM, 1972, SOCIOLOGICAL THEORIE, V2, P38 Gramsci A., 1971, SELECTIONS PRISON NO Marx K., 1970, GERMAN IDEOLOGY Weber M, 1968, EC SOC OUTLINE INTER WRONG DH, 1968, AM J SOCIOL, V73, P673, DOI 10.1086/224561 Lenski Gerhard, 1966, POWER PRIVILEGE Blau P.M, 1964, EXCHANGE POWER SOCIA Durkheim E, 1964, DIVISION LABOR SOC PARSONS T, 1963, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V27, P37, DOI 10.1086/267148 Parsons Talcott, 1963, AM PHILOS SOC, V107, P232 BACHRACH P, 1962, AM POLIT SCI REV, V56, P947, DOI 10.2307/1952796 EMERSON RM, 1962, AM SOCIOL REV, V27, P31, DOI 10.2307/2089716 Kuhn T., 1962, STRUCTURE SCI REVOLU Goffman E., 1961, ASYLUMS ESSAYS SOCIA Blalock H.M., 1961, SOC FORCES, V39, P53 Dahrendorf Ralf, 1959, CLASS CLASS CONFLICT DAHL RA, 1957, BEHAV SCI, V2, P201 Mills C. W., 1956, POWER ELITE Hunter Floyd, 1953, COMMUNITY POWER STRU Parsons T, 1951, SOCIAL SYSTEM Weber M, 1949, METHODOLOGY SOCIAL S Selznick Philip, 1949, TVA GRASSROOTS STUDY Weber M., 1946, M WEBER ESSAYS SOCIO Mills CW, 1940, AM SOCIOL REV, V5, P904, DOI 10.2307/2084524 Parsons T., 1937, STRUCTURE SOCIAL ACT Max Horkheimer, 1937, TRADITIONAL CRITICAL Addams J., 1910, 20 YEARS HULL HOUSE Du Bois W. E. B., 1903, SOULS BLACK FOLK Wells-Barnett Ida, 1892, SO HORRORS LYNCH LAW NR 154 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD DEC PY 2011 VL 90 IS 2 BP 349 EP 374 DI 10.1093/sf/sor034 PG 26 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 889XK UT WOS:000300108800002 ER PT J AU Bloome, D Western, B AF Bloome, Deirdre Western, Bruce TI Cohort Change and Racial Differences in Educational and Income Mobility SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID INTERGENERATIONAL SOCIAL-MOBILITY; UNITED-STATES; WAGE INEQUALITY; COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE; OCCUPATIONAL-MOBILITY; STRATIFICATION; OPPORTUNITY; TRENDS; ATTAINMENT; LAW AB Policy reforms and rising income inequality transformed educational and economic opportunities for Americans approaching midlife in the 1990s. Rising income inequality may have reduced mobility, as income gaps increased between rich and poor children. Against the effects of rising inequality, Civil Rights reforms may have increased mobility, as opportunities expanded across cohorts of black students and workers. We compare educational and income mobility for two cohorts of black and white men, the older born in the late 1940s and the younger born in the early 1960s. We find that educational mobility increased for black men, but income mobility declined for both races. Economic mobility declined despite unchanged or improved educational mobility because of increased returns to schooling and increased intergenerational income correlations, independent of schooling. C1 [Bloome, Deirdre] Harvard Univ, Dept Sociol, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA. RP Bloome, D (reprint author), Harvard Univ, Dept Sociol, 33 Kirkland St, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA EM dbloome@fas.harvard.edu CR Western B, 2011, AM SOCIOL REV, V76, P513, DOI 10.1177/0003122411414817 Mouw T, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P402, DOI 10.1177/0003122410363564 van Leeuwen MHD, 2010, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V36, P429, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.012809.102635 U.S. Bureau of the Census, 2010, HIST ED ATT TABL TAB Featherman David, 2010, NEXT 25 YEARS AFFIRM, P35 Lee CI, 2009, REV ECON STAT, V91, P766, DOI 10.1162/rest.91.4.766 Beller E, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P507 Bjorklund A., 2009, OXFORD HDB EC INEQUA, P491 Autor DH, 2008, REV ECON STAT, V90, P300, DOI 10.1162/rest.90.2.300 Goldin C., 2008, RACE ED TECHNOLOGY Massey Douglas, 2008, CATEGORICALLY UNEQUA Isaacs Julia, 2008, GETTING AHEAD LOSING, P71 Mazumder Bhashkar, 2008, J HUM RESOUR, V43, P1 Mazumder Bhashkar, 2007, 200712 FED RES BANK Hertz T, 2007, IND RELAT, V46, P22, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-232X.2007.00456.x Danziger Sheldon, 2007, PRICE INDEPENDENCE E, P56 Haider S, 2006, AM ECON REV, V96, P1308, DOI 10.1257/aer.96.4.1308 Beller E, 2006, FUTURE CHILD, V16, P19, DOI 10.1353/foc.2006.0012 Morgan Stephen, 2006, MOBILITY INEQUALITY, P3 Mayer SE, 2005, J HUM RESOUR, V40, P169 Breen R, 2005, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V31, P223, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.31.041304.122232 Mazumder B, 2005, UNEQUAL CHANCES: FAMILY BACKGROUND AND ECONOMIC SUCCESS, P80 Hertz T, 2005, UNEQUAL CHANCES: FAMILY BACKGROUND AND ECONOMIC SUCCESS, P165 Wakefield S, 2004, SOCIOL INQ, V74, P128, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2004.00082.x Gelman A., 2004, BAYESIAN DATA ANAL Neckerman Kathryn, 2004, SOCIAL INEQUALITY, P319 Kao G, 2003, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V29, P417, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.29.010202.100019 Fertig Angela, 2003, J INCOME DISTRIBUTIO, V12, P108 Levine David, 2002, 200208 FED RES BANK Danziger Sheldon, 2000, SECURING FUTURE INVE, P283 General Accounting Office, 1998, SCH FIN STAT EQ FUND BAKER TL, 1996, SOCIOL EDUC, V69, P82, DOI 10.2307/3108457 DOBBIN F, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V99, P396, DOI 10.1086/230269 RAFTERY AE, 1993, SOCIOL EDUC, V66, P41, DOI 10.2307/2112784 HAUSER RM, 1993, NAT BUR EC, P61 SOLON G, 1992, AM ECON REV, V82, P393 WOOD BD, 1990, AM J POLIT SCI, V34, P503, DOI 10.2307/2111459 HOUT M, 1984, AM SOCIOL REV, V49, P308, DOI 10.2307/2095276 HOUT M, 1984, AM J SOCIOL, V89, P1379, DOI 10.1086/228020 MARE RD, 1980, J AM STAT ASSOC, V75, P295, DOI 10.2307/2287448 Hauser R. M., 1977, PROCESS STRATIFICATI FEATHERMAN DL, 1976, AM J SOCIOL, V82, P621, DOI 10.1086/226356 Sewell William, 1975, ED OCCUPATION EARNIN Blau P., 1967, AM OCCUPATIONAL STRU NR 44 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD DEC PY 2011 VL 90 IS 2 BP 375 EP 395 DI 10.1093/sf/sor002 PG 21 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 889XK UT WOS:000300108800003 ER PT J AU Ailshire, JA House, JS AF Ailshire, Jennifer A. House, James S. TI The Unequal Burden of Weight Gain: An Intersectional Approach to Understanding Social Disparities in BMI Trajectories from 1986 to 2001/2002 SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID BODY-MASS INDEX; UNITED-STATES; OBESITY EPIDEMIC; SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; RACIAL DISPARITIES; PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; SAMPLE SELECTION; HEALTH; AGE; OVERWEIGHT AB The implications of recent weight gain trends for widening social disparities in body weight in the United States are unclear. Using an intersectional approach to studying inequality, and the longitudinal and nationally representative American's Changing Lives study (1986-2001/2002), we examine social disparities in body mass index trajectories during a time of rapid weight gain in the United States. Results reveal complex interactive effects of gender, race, socioeconomic position and age, and provide evidence for increasing social disparities, particularly among younger adults. Most notably, among individuals who aged from 25-39 to 45-54 during the study interval, low-educated and low-income black women experienced the greatest increase in BMI, while high-educated and high-income white men experienced the least BMI growth. These new findings highlight the importance of investigating changing disparities in weight intersectionally, using multiple dimensions of inequality as well as age, and also presage increasing BMI disparities in the U. S. adult population. C1 [Ailshire, Jennifer A.] Univ So Calif, Ethel Percy Andrus Gerontol Ctr, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA. [House, James S.] Univ Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA. RP Ailshire, JA (reprint author), Univ So Calif, Ethel Percy Andrus Gerontol Ctr, 3715 McClintock Ave,Room 218C, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA EM ailshire@usc.edu CR Lovasi GS, 2009, EPIDEMIOL REV, V31, P7, DOI 10.1093/epirev/mxp005 Clarke P, 2009, INT J EPIDEMIOL, V38, P499, DOI 10.1093/ije/dyn214 Raley R. K., 2009, RACE SOCIAL PROBLEMS, V1, P132, DOI 10.1007/s12552-009-9013-3 Reynolds SL, 2007, J AGING HEALTH, V19, P831, DOI 10.1177/0898264307305182 Gorber SC, 2007, OBES REV, V8, P307, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-789X.2007.00347.x Wang Y, 2007, EPIDEMIOL REV, V29, P6, DOI 10.1093/epirev/mxm007 Feng D, 2006, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V61, pS323 Carr D, 2006, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V69, P127 Kim D, 2006, AM J PREV MED, V30, P430, DOI 10.1016/j.amepre.2005.12.007 Campos P, 2006, INT J EPIDEMIOL, V35, P55, DOI 10.1093/ije/dyi254 Flegal KM, 2006, INT J EPIDEMIOL, V35, P72, DOI 10.1093/ije/dyi260 Boero Natalie, 2006, QUALITATIVE SOCIOLOG, V30, P41 Saguy AC, 2005, J HEALTH POLIT POLIC, V30, P869, DOI 10.1215/03616878-30-5-869 Carr D, 2005, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V46, P244 Baltrus PT, 2005, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V95, P1595, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.2004.046292 Mujahid MS, 2005, OBES RES, V13, P1412, DOI 10.1038/oby.2005.171 Drewnowski A, 2005, AM J CLIN NUTR, V82, p265S McCall L, 2005, SIGNS, V30, P1771, DOI 10.1086/426800 Farmer MM, 2005, SOC SCI MED, V60, P191, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2004.04.026 Brownson RC, 2005, ANNU REV PUBL HEALTH, V26, P421, DOI 10.1146/annurev.publhealth.26.021304.14437 Cawley J, 2004, J HUM RESOUR, V39, P451, DOI 10.2307/3559022 Ferraro KF, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P707, DOI 10.2307/1519759 Dallman MF, 2003, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V100, P11696, DOI 10.1073/pnas.1934666100 Heo M, 2003, STAT MED, V22, P1911, DOI 10.1002/sim.1218 Sheehan TJ, 2003, INT J OBESITY, V27, P498, DOI 10.1038/sj.ijo.0802263 Mattingly MJ, 2003, SOC FORCES, V81, P999, DOI 10.1353/sof.2003.0036 Singer J. D., 2003, APPL LONGITUDINAL DA House JS, 2002, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V43, P125, DOI 10.2307/3090192 Raudenbush S.W., 2002, HIERARCHICAL LINEAR Swinburn B, 2002, Obes Rev, V3, P289, DOI 10.1046/j.1467-789X.2002.00082.x Hebl MR, 2001, INT J OBESITY, V25, P1246, DOI 10.1038/sj.ijo.0801681 Bjorntorp P, 2001, Obes Rev, V2, P73, DOI 10.1046/j.1467-789x.2001.00027.x Schulz A, 2000, SOC SCI MED, V51, P1639, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(00)00084-8 Hayward MD, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P910, DOI 10.2307/2657519 Jacobson MF, 2000, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V90, P854, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.90.6.854 Harnack LJ, 2000, AM J CLIN NUTR, V71, P1478 Nestle M, 2000, PUBLIC HEALTH REP, V115, P12, DOI 10.1093/phr/115.1.12 Must A, 1999, JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC, V282, P1523, DOI 10.1001/jama.282.16.1523 Averett S, 1999, INT J OBESITY, V23, P166, DOI 10.1038/sj.ijo.0800805 Eyler AA, 1998, HEALTH EDUC BEHAV, V25, P640, DOI 10.1177/109019819802500510 Hill JO, 1998, SCIENCE, V280, P1371, DOI 10.1126/science.280.5368.1371 Krieger N, 1997, ANNU REV PUBL HEALTH, V18, P341, DOI 10.1146/annurev.publhealth.18.1.341 Ferraro KF, 1996, SOC FORCES, V75, P667, DOI 10.2307/2580418 Ross CE, 1996, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V37, P104, DOI 10.2307/2137234 Burke G L, 1996, Ethn Health, V1, P327 Phelan Jo, 1995, J HLTH SOCIAL BEHAV, V35, P80, DOI DOI 10.2307/2626958 WILLIAMS DR, 1995, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V21, P349, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.21.1.349 HOUSE JS, 1994, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V35, P213, DOI 10.2307/2137277 KUCZMARSKI RJ, 1994, JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC, V272, P205, DOI 10.1001/jama.272.3.205 WAITZMAN NJ, 1994, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V84, P945, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.84.6.945 LAVEIST TA, 1994, HEALTH SERV RES, V29, P1 ROSS CE, 1994, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V35, P63, DOI 10.2307/2137335 KRIEGER N, 1993, AM J PREV MED, V9, P82 GRUNBERG NE, 1992, HEALTH PSYCHOL, V11, P97, DOI 10.1037//0278-6133.11.2.97 KAHN HS, 1991, AM J CLIN NUTR, V53, pS1566 Crenshaw K., 1991, STANFORD LAW REV, V43, P1241, DOI 10.2307/1229039 Collins Patricia Hill, 1990, BLACK FEMINIST THOUG HOUSE JS, 1990, MILBANK Q, V68, P383, DOI 10.2307/3350111 RILEY MW, 1987, AM SOCIOL REV, V52, P1, DOI 10.2307/2095388 KESSLER RC, 1986, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V27, P107, DOI 10.2307/2136310 ROGOSA D, 1982, PSYCHOL BULL, V92, P726, DOI 10.1037//0033-2909.92.3.726 Pines Harvey A., 1979, WORK OCCUPATION, V6, P312, DOI 10.1177/073088847900600303 Mannheim Karl, 1952, ESSAYS SOCIOLOGY KNO, P276 NR 63 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD DEC PY 2011 VL 90 IS 2 BP 397 EP 423 DI 10.1093/sf/sor001 PG 27 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 889XK UT WOS:000300108800004 ER PT J AU Bartley, T Child, C AF Bartley, Tim Child, Curtis TI Movements, Markets and Fields: The Effects of Anti-Sweatshop Campaigns on U.S. Firms, 1993-2000 SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID CORPORATE SOCIAL-RESPONSIBILITY; COLLECTIVE ACTION; BIOTECH MOVEMENT; LABOR STANDARDS; ACTIVISM; REPUTATION; TARGETS; CODES; INSTITUTIONALIZATION; PERFORMANCE AB How do social movements influence corporations? Recent work suggests that movements can inflict material damage on their targets and shape categories of evaluation in organizational fields. Extending these ideas, we examine the effects of anti-sweatshop campaigns on sales, stock performance, reputation and specialized ratings of U. S. firms, using fixed-effects regression models and event study methods. The analysis demonstrates that social movements can in some circumstances shape both the markets and fields that firms inhabit. Specifically, anti-sweatshop campaigns (1. had negative effects on sales (though only among certain types of firms), (2. influenced stock prices, and (3. shaped specialized ratings of corporate responsibility. They also diminished previously positive corporate reputations (to a modest degree) but did not radically alter reputational hierarchies in the business community. C1 [Bartley, Tim] Indiana Univ Bloomington, Bloomington, IN USA. [Child, Curtis] Brigham Young Univ, Provo, UT 84602 USA. RP Bartley, T (reprint author), Indiana Univ, Dept Sociol, 1020 E Kirkwood Ave,BH 744, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA EM bartleyt@indiana.edu CR Doh JP, 2010, J MANAGE, V36, P1461, DOI 10.1177/0149206309337896 Chatterji AK, 2010, STRATEGIC MANAGE J, V31, P917, DOI 10.1002/smj.840 Kellogg KC, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P657 Best J, 2009, SOCIOL QUART, V50, P431 Love EG, 2009, ACAD MANAGE J, V52, P314 Chatterji AK, 2009, J ECON MANAGE STRAT, V18, P125, DOI 10.1111/j.1530-9134.2009.00210.x Lenox MJ, 2009, J ECON MANAGE STRAT, V18, P45, DOI 10.1111/j.1530-9134.2009.00207.x Weber K, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P106 Allison P.D., 2009, FIXED EFFECTS REGRES Soule S.A., 2009, CONTENTION CORPORATE Prakash Aseem, 2009, VOLUNTARY PROGRAMS C, P107 Child Curtis, 2009, SHAMING CORPORATION King BG, 2008, ADMIN SCI QUART, V53, P395, DOI 10.2189/asqu.53.3.395 Weber K, 2008, ADMIN SCI QUART, V53, P529, DOI 10.2189/asqu.53.3.529 Briscoe F, 2008, ADMIN SCI QUART, V53, P460, DOI 10.2189/asqu.53.3.460 Schneiberg M, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P635 Walker ET, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P35, DOI 10.1086/588737 Locke RM, 2007, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V61, P3 Baron DP, 2007, J ECON MANAGE STRAT, V16, P599, DOI 10.1111/j.1530-9134.2007.00152.x King BG, 2007, ADMIN SCI QUART, V52, P413 Den Hond F, 2007, ACAD MANAGE REV, V32, P901 Seidman Gay, 2007, BOYCOTT LABOR RIGHTS KLD Research & Analytics, 2007, KLD PROF NKE Smyth Nicholas, 2007, IS THERE CONSUMER DE Armstrong EA, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P724 Eesley C, 2006, STRATEGIC MANAGE J, V27, P765, DOI 10.1002/smj.536 Sauder M, 2006, LAW SOC REV, V40, P105, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-5893.2006.00261.x Luders J, 2006, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P963, DOI 10.1086/498632 Rao H, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P968 Rodriguez-Garavito CA, 2005, POLIT SOC, V33, P203, DOI 10.1177/003232920527519110.1177/ Davis G.F., 2005, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS ORG Vogel David, 2005, MARKET VIRTUE POTENT Bartley T, 2005, RES POLIT SOCIOL, V14, P211, DOI 10.1016/S0895-9935(05)14007-8 SUM NL, 2005, COMPETITION CHANGE, V9, P181, DOI 10.1179/102452905X45427 Armbruster-Sandoval Ralph, 2005, GLOBALIZATION CROSS Doane Deborah, 2005, STANFORD SOCIAL INNO, V3, P23 Shamir R, 2004, LAW SOC REV, V38, P635, DOI 10.1111/j.0023-9216.2004.00062.x Zajac EJ, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P433 Schurman R, 2004, SOC PROBL, V51, P243, DOI 10.1525/sp.2004.51.2.243 Earl J, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P65, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.30.012703.110603 Van Dyke N, 2004, RES SOC MOV CONFL CH, V25, P27, DOI 10.1016/S0163-786X(04)25002-9 Raeburn Nicole, 2004, CHANGING CORPORATE A Ross Robert, 2004, SLAVES FASHION POVER Spar DL, 2003, CALIF MANAGE REV, V45, P78 Lounsbury M., 2003, SOCIO-ECON REV, V1, P71, DOI 10.1093/soceco/1.1.71 Freeman Richard, 2003, CAN LABOR STANDARDS ROCK MT, 2003, COMPETITION CHANGE, V7, P23, DOI 10.1080/1024529032000093352 Roberts PW, 2002, STRATEGIC MANAGE J, V23, P1077, DOI 10.1002/smj.274 Beckman CM, 2002, ADMIN SCI QUART, V47, P92, DOI 10.2307/3094892 Schnietz Karen, 2002, INT TRADE J, V16, P129, DOI 10.1080/08853900252901396 Feddersen TJ, 2001, J ECON MANAGE STRAT, V10, P149, DOI 10.1162/105864001300122584 Palmer Timothy, 2001, CORPORATE REPUTATION, V14, P3 Louie Miriam Ching Yoon, 2001, SWEATSHOP WARRIORS I Manheim Jarol, 2001, DEATH THOUSAND CUTS Staw BM, 2000, ADMIN SCI QUART, V45, P523, DOI 10.2307/2667108 Appelbaum Richard, 2000, LABEL INEQUALITY LOS Rao H, 2000, RES ORGAN BEHAV, V22, P237, DOI 10.1016/S0191-3085(00)22007-8 Zuckerman EW, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V104, P1398, DOI 10.1086/210178 Klein Naomi, 1999, NO LOGO TAKING AIM B McWilliams A, 1997, ACAD MANAGE J, V40, P626, DOI 10.2307/257056 Ross Andrew, 1997, NO SWEAT FASHION FRE FOMBRUN C, 1990, ACAD MANAGE J, V33, P233, DOI 10.2307/256324 NR 62 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD DEC PY 2011 VL 90 IS 2 BP 425 EP 451 DI 10.1093/sf/sor010 PG 27 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 889XK UT WOS:000300108800005 ER PT J AU Dorius, CR McCarthy, JD AF Dorius, Cassandra R. McCarthy, John D. TI Understanding Activist Leadership Effort in the Movement Opposing Drinking and Driving SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID SOCIAL-MOVEMENTS; DIFFERENTIAL PARTICIPATION; RESOURCE MOBILIZATION; FREEDOM SUMMER; GENDER; ORGANIZATIONS; RECRUITMENT; ASSOCIATION AB Why do some social movement leaders work harder than others? And, how does gender affect the patterns we uncover? Utilizing historical case study evidence of local chapters in the emerging movement opposing drinking and driving we are able to develop and test theoretical expectations about predictors of weekly effort among MADD and RID leaders. Taken together, our model explains 45 percent of the variation in leadership effort. We find bureaucratic complexity and victim support activities are more powerful predictors of effort than are individual leader characteristics, although all are important. Further analysis reveals that gender almost wholly conditions the strong effect of bureaucratic complexity on leadership effort so that increasingly complex chapter structures are associated with substantial increases in work hours for women but not men. C1 [Dorius, Cassandra R.] Univ Michigan, Ctr Populat Studies, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 USA. [McCarthy, John D.] Penn State Univ, University Pk, PA 16802 USA. RP Dorius, CR (reprint author), Univ Michigan, Ctr Populat Studies, 426 Thompson St, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 USA EM cdorius@isr.umich.edu CR Andrews Kenneth T., 2010, EXPLAINING VOLUNTEER Ganz Marshall, 2009, WHY DAVID SOMETIMES Musick M. A., 2008, VOLUNTEERS SOCIAL PR Bianchi S. M., 2006, CHANGING RHYTHMS AM Schussman A, 2005, SOC FORCES, V84, P1083, DOI 10.1353/sof.2006.0034 Hook JL, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P101 Klandermans B., 2004, BLACKWELL COMPANION, P360, DOI 10.1002/9780470999103.ch16 Snow David A., 2004, BLACKWELL COMPANION, P171, DOI 10.1002/9780470999103.ch8 Cohn SF, 2003, SOCIOL INQ, V73, P311, DOI 10.1111/1475-682X.00059 Adams J, 2002, J CONTEMP ETHNOGR, V31, P285, DOI 10.1177/0891241602031003002 Passy F, 2001, SOCIOL FORUM, V16, P123, DOI 10.1023/A:1007613403970 Einwohner RL, 2000, GENDER SOC, V14, P679, DOI 10.1177/089124300014005006 Popielarz PA, 1999, GENDER SOC, V13, P234, DOI 10.1177/089124399013002005 Jennings MK, 1999, AM POLIT SCI REV, V93, P1, DOI 10.2307/2585757 Taylor V, 1999, GENDER SOC, V13, P8, DOI 10.1177/089124399013001002 Einwohner RL, 1999, GENDER SOC, V13, P56, DOI 10.1177/089124399013001004 Klandermans Bert, 1997, SOCIAL PSYCHOL PROTE McCarthy JD, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P1070, DOI 10.2307/2096309 Finke R, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P203, DOI 10.2307/2096331 Lofland J, 1996, SOCIAL MOVEMENT ORG BARKAN SE, 1995, SOCIOL FORUM, V10, P113, DOI 10.1007/BF02098566 Weed Frank J., 1995, CERTAINTY JUSTICE RE Larana Enrique, 1994, NEW SOCIAL MOVEMENTS, P133 MCADAM D, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V97, P1211, DOI 10.1086/229900 Oliver P. E., 1992, FRONTIERS SOCIAL MOV, P251 WILTFANG GL, 1991, SOC FORCES, V69, P987, DOI 10.2307/2579299 EAGLY AH, 1990, PSYCHOL BULL, V108, P233, DOI 10.1037//0033-2909.108.2.233 WEED FJ, 1990, SOCIOL QUART, V31, P459, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1990.tb00339.x Amick Angelynne, 1990, IMPACT HOMICIDE SURV Blumberg Rhoda Lois, 1990, WOMEN SOCIAL PROTEST ROCK P, 1988, BRIT J CRIMINOL, V28, P44 ROCK P, 1988, CAN J SOCIOL, V13, P359, DOI 10.2307/3340812 STAGGENBORG S, 1988, AM SOCIOL REV, V53, P585, DOI 10.2307/2095851 Wolfson Mark, 1987, CHAPTER SURVEY REPOR MCADAM D, 1986, AM J SOCIOL, V92, P64, DOI 10.1086/228463 Independent Sector Report, 1986, GIV VOL US FIND NAT Becker Gary S., 1981, TREATISE FAMILY MCCARTHY JD, 1977, AM J SOCIOL, V82, P1212, DOI 10.1086/226464 NR 38 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD DEC PY 2011 VL 90 IS 2 BP 453 EP 473 DI 10.1093/sf/sor035 PG 21 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 889XK UT WOS:000300108800006 ER PT J AU Valdez, S AF Valdez, Sarah TI Subsidizing the Cost of Collective Action: International Organizations and Protest among Polish Farmers during Democratic Transition SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article AB Polish farmers became politically contentious after democratization in 1989, despite their minimal involvement in the Solidarity movement. I test the effectiveness of social movement theories in explaining this phenomenon by examining frequency and intensity of protest from 1980-1995. I find that grievance models have little explanatory power, political opportunity accounts for the frequency of protest, and resource mobilization offers insight into both frequency and intensity of protests. Supplementing existing theories, I offer qualitative evidence that development programs designed to restructure agricultural cooperatives created mobilizing structures. The reforms were intended to help family farmers adapt to the new market economy, but because most protests targeted liberalization policies, I conclude that in their short-term success, development agencies inadvertently subsidized the cost of collection action against their long-term goals. C1 Univ Washington, Dept Sociol, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. RP Valdez, S (reprint author), Univ Washington, Dept Sociol, 211 Savery Hall,Box 353340, Seattle, WA 98195 USA EM sarahv@u.washington.edu CR Meyer DS, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P125, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.30.012703.110545 Czarzasty Jan, 2004, ZWIAZKI ZAWODOWE ROL Osa Maryjane, 2003, SOLIDARITY CONTENTIO Meyer David S., 2002, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS IDE, P124 McAdam D., 2001, DYNAMICS CONTENTION Goodwin Jeff, 2001, NO OTHER WAY OUT STA Oberschall A, 2000, RATION SOC, V12, P5, DOI 10.1177/104346300012001001 Pattison Dwayne, 2000, AGR COOPERATIVES SEL World Bank, 2000, WORLD DEV IND Kubik Jan, 1999, REBELLIOUS CIVIL SOC Kovach I., 1999, RURAL SOC COMMUNISM, P179 Chyra-Rolicz Zofia, 1997, INT COOPERATIVE ALLI, V90, P66 McAdam D., 1996, COMP PERSPECTIVES SO Brodzinski Marian, 1996, REV INT COOPERATION, V9, P34 Tarrow Sidney, 1995, REPERTOIRES CYCLES C, P89 Lichbach MarkI, 1995, REBELS DILEMMA Tilly Charles, 1995, POPULAR CONTENTION G OECD, 1995, REV AGR POL POL United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, 1994, CENTR E EUR AGR TRAN, V6, P20 Hunek T., 1994, CENTRAL E EUROPE AGR, V5 United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, 1994, CENTR E EUR AGR TRAN, V5 Juhasz Janos, 1994, CENTRAL E EUROPE AGR, V4 Schmidt-Alts Volker, 1994, EUROPEAN CONFEDERATI, P71 Marwell G., 1993, CRITICAL MASS COLLEC Kowalak Tadeusz, 1993, COUNTRY STUDY Benford Robert, 1992, FRONTIERS SOCIAL MOV, P133 World Bank, 1990, AGR STRAT POL REP PO Eckstein Susan, 1989, POWER POPULAR PROTES, P102 Eckstein Susan, 1989, POWER POPULAR PROTES, P299 GORLACH K, 1989, SOCIOL RURALIS, V29, P23, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9523.1989.tb00353.x Rocznik Statystyczny, 1989, ANN STAT YB POLAND Hechter M., 1987, PRINCIPLES GROUP SOL GAMSON WA, 1984, THEOR SOC, V13, P567, DOI 10.1007/BF00156903 Hardin R, 1982, COLLECTIVE ACTION McAdam Douglas, 1982, POLITICAL PROCESS DE SKOCPOL THEDA, 1979, STATES SOCIAL REVOLU Tilly C., 1978, MOBILIZATION REVOLUT Tucker Robert C., 1978, MARXENGELS READER, P594 Piven F.F., 1977, POOR PEOPLES MOVEMEN Oberschall A., 1973, SOCIAL CONFLICT SOCI Freeman Jo., 1973, AM J SOCIOL, V78, P793 Eisinger Peter, 1973, AM POLIT SCI REV, V81, P11 Wolf Eric R., 1969, PEASANT WARS 20 CENT Gamson WA, 1968, POWER DISCONTENT GURR T, 1968, WORLD POLIT, V20, P245, DOI 10.2307/2009798 Olson Mancur, 1965, LOGIC COLLECTIVE ACT Smelser Neil J., 1963, THEORY COLLECTIVE BE Yates Aubrey J., 1962, FRUSTRATION CONFLICT NR 48 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD DEC PY 2011 VL 90 IS 2 BP 475 EP 495 DI 10.1093/sf/sor036 PG 21 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 889XK UT WOS:000300108800007 ER PT J AU Andrew, M Hauser, RM AF Andrew, Megan Hauser, Robert M. TI Adoption? Adaptation? Evaluating the Formation of Educational Expectations SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID ATTAINMENT PROCESS; ADOLESCENT BRAIN; HIGH-SCHOOL; GENDER; CHOICE AB Sociologists have long used educational expectations to understand the complex mental processes underlying individuals' educational decision making. Yet, little research evaluates how students actually formulate their educational expectations. Status attainment theory asserts that students adopt their educational expectations early based on family background and social influences, and that their educational expectations are driven by a static mental construct as a result. In contrast, recent research based on Bayesian learning theory hypothesizes that students mostly adapt their educational expectations in light of new information about their academic potential. Comparing models of expectations formation in adolescence, we find that students' expectations do not derive from a static mental construct. However, students adapt their educational expectations only modestly and only in response to very large changes in grade point averages. Thus, adolescent educational expectations stabilize early and are rather persistent over time. C1 [Andrew, Megan] Univ Notre Dame, Ctr Res Educ Opportun, Notre Dame, IN 46530 USA. [Hauser, Robert M.] Univ Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706 USA. RP Andrew, M (reprint author), Univ Notre Dame, Ctr Res Educ Opportun, 1018 Flanner, Notre Dame, IN 46530 USA EM andrew.8@nd.edu CR Gardner Lindzey, 2010, HDB SOCIAL PSYCHOL, V2, P1089 Erickson LD, 2009, SOCIOL EDUC, V82, P344 Yaish Meir, 2009, EUROPEAN SOCIOLOGICA, V25, P1 Alexander K, 2008, SOCIOL EDUC, V81, P371 Casey BJ, 2008, ANN NY ACAD SCI, V1124, P111, DOI 10.1196/annals.1440.010 Greene W.H., 2008, ECONOMETRIC ANAL von Hippel PT, 2007, SOCIOL METHODOL, V37, P83, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9531.2007.00180.x Blakemore SJ, 2006, J CHILD PSYCHOL PSYC, V47, P296, DOI 10.1111/j.1469-7610.2006.01611.x Morgan Stephen L., 2005, EDGE COMMITMENT ED A Manski CF, 2004, ECONOMETRICA, V72, P1329, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0262.2004.00537.x Horton NJ, 2003, AM STAT, V57, P229, DOI 10.1198/0003130032314 Lareau A., 2003, UNEQUAL CHILDHOODS C Cheng S, 2002, SOCIOL EDUC, V75, P306, DOI 10.2307/3090281 Dumais SA, 2002, SOCIOL EDUC, V75, P44, DOI 10.2307/3090253 Leboeuf Robyn A., 2002, DISS ABSTR INT B, V632, P1088 Gilbert D. T, 2002, HEURISTICS BIASES PS, P167 Correll SJ, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P1691, DOI 10.1086/321299 Allison PD, 2001, MISSING DATA Anderson VA, 2001, DEV NEUROPSYCHOL, V20, P385, DOI 10.1207/S15326942DN2001_5 Beutel AM, 2000, SOCIOL QUART, V41, P297, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.2000.tb00097.x Medin DL, 1999, PSYCHON B REV, V6, P533, DOI 10.3758/BF03212961 Bargh JA, 1999, AM PSYCHOL, V54, P462, DOI 10.1037//0003-066X.54.7.462 Hauser RM, 1997, SOCIOL METHODOL, V27, P177, DOI 10.1111/1467-9531.271028 Raftery AE, 1995, SOCIOL METHODOL, V25, P111, DOI 10.2307/271063 Varey C., 1992, Journal of Behavioral Decision Making, V5, DOI 10.1002/bdm.3960050303 HAUSER RM, 1991, SOCIOL EDUC, V64, P263, DOI 10.2307/2112707 Munier B., 1988, RISK DECISION RATL, P327 Edelman G. M., 1987, NEURAL DARWINISM THE Gambetta D., 1987, WERE THEY PUSHED DID TVERSKY A, 1986, J BUS, V59, pS251, DOI 10.1086/296365 TVERSKY A, 1983, PSYCHOL REV, V90, P293, DOI 10.1037/0033-295X.90.4.293 Hauser R.M., 1982, SOCIAL STRUCTURE BEH, P3 KERCKHOFF AC, 1977, SOCIOL EDUC, V50, P15, DOI 10.2307/2112641 HALLER AO, 1973, SOCIOL EDUC, V46, P51, DOI 10.2307/2112205 SEWELL WH, 1969, AM SOCIOL REV, V34, P82, DOI 10.2307/2092789 NR 35 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD DEC PY 2011 VL 90 IS 2 BP 497 EP 520 DI 10.1093/sf/sor005 PG 24 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 889XK UT WOS:000300108800008 ER PT J AU Bradley, CL Renzulli, LA AF Bradley, Christen L. Renzulli, Linda A. TI The Complexity of Non-Completion: Being Pushed or Pulled to Drop Out of High School SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID OPPOSITIONAL CULTURE; AMERICAN ADOLESCENTS; EARLY CHILDBEARING; BLACK-ADOLESCENTS; MEXICAN-AMERICAN; ASIAN-AMERICANS; MODEL MINORITY; STUDENTS; FAMILY; RISK AB Using a model of student dropout with only two possible outcomes - "still in school" or "dropout" - hides the complex reasons that students leave high school. We offer a model with three outcomes: in school, pushed out or pulled out. Using data from the Educational Longitudinal Survey, we find that for black students, differences in SES explain higher likelihoods of being either pushed or pulled out as compared to white students, but Latino students remain more likely to be pulled out even after we control for SES. We also find that SES moderates the relationship between race/gender and being pushed out, and that higher levels of SES may be detrimental to students of color in the context of high poverty schools. C1 [Bradley, Christen L.] Univ Georgia, Dept Sociol, Athens, GA 30602 USA. RP Bradley, CL (reprint author), Univ Georgia, Dept Sociol, 214-A Baldwin Hall, Athens, GA 30602 USA EM cbradley@uga.edu CR Pew Hispanic Center, 2009, 2 WORLDS YOUNG LAT C Gilbert Shelby, 2009, NEGRO ED REV, V60, P71 Ream RK, 2008, SOCIOL EDUC, V81, P109 Downey DB, 2008, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V34, P107, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.34.040507.134635 Sapien Yolanda, 2008, LATINO DROPOUTS RURA Lee JC, 2007, SOCIOL EDUC, V80, P158 Harris AL, 2007, SOCIOL EDUC, V80, P139 Dunham R, 2007, SOCIOL SPECTRUM, V27, P207, DOI 10.1080/02732170601123435 Ash Katie, 2007, ED WEEK, V26, P12 Malagon Maria C., 2007, NEVADA LAW J, V7, P841 IES National Center for Education Statistics, 2007, ED LONG STUD 2002 EL Stearns E, 2006, YOUTH SOC, V38, P29, DOI 10.1177/0044118X0528764 Perreira KM, 2006, DEMOGRAPHY, V43, P511, DOI 10.1353/dem.2006.0026 Abrego Leisy J., 2006, LATINO STUDIES, V4, P212, DOI 10.1057/palgrave.lst.8600200 Wong F, 2006, J MULTICULT COUNS D, V34, P38 Walzer Philip, 2006, VIRGINIAN PILOT Olatunji AN, 2005, HARVARD EDUC REV, V75, P286 Tyson K, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P582 Carter P, 2005, KEEPIN IT REAL SCH S Laws Jerry, 2005, Occup Health Saf, V74, P4 Gittleman M, 2004, J HUM RESOUR, V39, P193, DOI 10.2307/3559010 Fortin L, 2004, CAN J BEHAV SCI, V36, P219, DOI 10.1037/h0087232 Ogbu John U., 2004, URBAN REV, V36, P1, DOI 10.1023/B:URRE.0000042734.83194.f6 Lee J, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P221, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.30.012703.110519 Hattam Robert, 2004, DROPPING OUT DRIFTIN Tough Paul, 2004, NY TIMES MAGAZINE Lee VE, 2003, AM EDUC RES J, V40, P353, DOI 10.3102/00028312040002353 LAN W, 2003, J ED STUDENTS PLACED, V8, P309, DOI 10.1207/S15327671ESPR0803_2 Harris DR, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P614, DOI 10.2307/3088948 Tyson K, 2002, SOC FORCES, V80, P1157, DOI 10.1353/sof.2002.0035 Downey DB, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P156, DOI 10.2307/3088939 Massey Douglas, 2002, SMOKE MIRRORS MEXICA Griffin B. W., 2002, HIGH SCH J, P71, DOI 10.1353/hsj.2002.0008 Valencia R. R., 2002, J LATINOS ED, V1, P81, DOI 10.1207/S1532771XJLE0102_2 Hofferth SL, 2001, FAM PLANN PERSPECT, V33, P259, DOI 10.2307/3030193 Alexander KL, 2001, TEACH COLL REC, V103, P760, DOI 10.1111/0161-4681.00134 Stanton-Salazar R. D., 2001, MANUFACTURING HOPE D Rumberger RW, 2000, SOCIOL EDUC, V73, P39, DOI 10.2307/2673198 Driscoll AK, 1999, INT MIGR REV, V33, P857, DOI 10.2307/2547355 Goldschmidt P, 1999, AM EDUC RES J, V36, P715, DOI 10.2307/1163518 Fuligni AJ, 1999, CHILD DEV, V70, P1030, DOI 10.1111/1467-8624.00075 Gillock KL, 1999, J YOUTH ADOLESCENCE, V28, P259, DOI 10.1023/A:1021657516275 Conley D., 1999, BEING BLACK LIVING R Landale NS, 1998, SOC SCI RES, V27, P457, DOI 10.1006/ssre.1998.0631 Carbonaro WJ, 1998, SOCIOL EDUC, V71, P295, DOI 10.2307/2673172 Sucoff CA, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P571, DOI 10.2307/2657268 Ogbu JU, 1998, ANTHROPOL EDUC QUART, V29, P155, DOI 10.1525/aeq.1998.29.2.155 Manlove J, 1998, J RES ADOLESCENCE, V8, P187, DOI 10.1207/s15327795jra0802_2 Wong P, 1998, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V41, P95 McNeal RB, 1997, SOCIOL EDUC, V70, P206, DOI 10.2307/2673209 Ensminger ME, 1996, CHILD DEV, V67, P2400, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8624.1996.tb01864.x Jordan WJ, 1996, YOUTH SOC, V28, P62, DOI 10.1177/0044118X96028001003 Raudenbush SW, 1995, J EDUC BEHAV STAT, V20, P307, DOI 10.3102/10769986020004307 Oliver M. L., 1995, BLACK WEALTH WHITE W MCNEAL RB, 1995, SOCIOL EDUC, V68, P62, DOI 10.2307/2112764 ASTONE NM, 1994, DEMOGRAPHY, V31, P575, DOI 10.2307/2061791 HARKLAU L, 1994, ANTHROPOL EDUC QUART, V25, P347, DOI 10.1525/aeq.1994.25.3.04x0149s AHN N, 1994, FAM PLANN PERSPECT, V26, P17, DOI 10.2307/2136091 Rossi R.J., 1994, SCH STUDENTS RISK CO, P90 BOWDITCH C, 1993, SOC PROBL, V40, P493, DOI 10.1525/sp.1993.40.4.03x0094p Denton Nancy A., 1993, AM APARTHEID SEGREGA FITZPATRICK KM, 1992, SOCIOL EDUC, V65, P76, DOI 10.2307/2112694 Dworkin Anthony Gary, 1991, GIVING SCH STUDENT D OGBU JU, 1990, J NEGRO EDUC, V59, P45, DOI 10.2307/2295291 MICKELSON RA, 1990, SOCIOL EDUC, V63, P44, DOI 10.2307/2112896 OGBU JU, 1987, ANTHROPOL EDUC QUART, V18, P312, DOI 10.1525/aeq.1987.18.4.04x0022v RUMBERGER RW, 1987, REV EDUC RES, V57, P101, DOI 10.3102/00346543057002101 NIELSEN F, 1986, SOC SCI RES, V15, P209, DOI 10.1016/0049-089X(86)90006-2 EKSTROM RB, 1986, TEACH COLL REC, V87, P356 FINE M, 1986, TEACH COLL REC, V87, P393 Fordham S., 1986, URBAN REV, V18, P176, DOI DOI 10.1007/BF01112192 RUMBERGER RW, 1983, AM EDUC RES J, V20, P199, DOI 10.3102/00028312020002199 Rosenberg Pearl, 1983, J EDUC, V165, P257 ANDERSON CS, 1982, REV EDUC RES, V52, P368, DOI 10.3102/00346543052003368 Coleman James S., 1982, HIGH SCH ACHIEVEMENT FELICE LG, 1981, J NEGRO EDUC, V50, P415, DOI 10.2307/2294802 MOORE KA, 1977, FAM PLANN PERSPECT, V9, P220, DOI 10.2307/2134432 NAM CB, 1968, J HUM RESOUR, V3, P171, DOI 10.2307/145130 NR 78 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD DEC PY 2011 VL 90 IS 2 BP 521 EP 545 DI 10.1093/sf/sor003 PG 25 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 889XK UT WOS:000300108800009 ER PT J AU Bromley, P Meyer, JW Ramirez, FO AF Bromley, Patricia Meyer, John W. Ramirez, Francisco O. TI Student-Centeredness in Social Science Textbooks, 1970-2008: A Cross-National Study SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID HUMAN-RIGHTS; WORLDWIDE EXPANSION; EDUCATION; CONSTRUCTION; SOCIETY; DIVERSITY; HISTORY; SCHOOLS; STATE AB A striking feature of modern societies is the extent to which individual persons are culturally validated as equal and empowered actors. The expansion of a wide range of rights in recent decades, given prominence in current discussions of world society, supports an expanded conception of the individual. We examine the extent to which broad global changes promoting human empowerment are associated with expanded ideas of the status and capacities of students. We hypothesize that there are substantial increases in student-centered educational foci in countries around the world. First, the rights of students as children are directly asserted. Second, an emphasis on empowered human agency supports forms of socialization that promote active participation as well as the capacities and interests of the student. Examining a unique dataset of 533 secondary school social science textbooks from 74 countries published over the past 40 years, we find that textbooks have indeed become more student-centered, and that this shift is associated with the rising status of individuals and children in global human rights treaties and organizations. Student-centered texts are more common in countries with greater individualism embodied in political and socio-economic institutions and ideologies, and with more links to world society. The study contributes to both political and educational sociology, examining how global changes lead to increased emphasis on empowered individual agency in intended curricula. C1 [Bromley, Patricia] Univ Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA. [Meyer, John W.; Ramirez, Francisco O.] Stanford Univ, Stanford, CA 94305 USA. RP Bromley, P (reprint author), Univ Utah, 260 S Cent Campus Dr,Rm 214, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA EM p.bromley@utah.edu CR Bromley P, 2011, COMP EDUC REV, V55, P517, DOI 10.1086/660797 Heritage Foundation, 2011, IND EC FREED Meyer JW, 2010, SOCIOL EDUC, V83, P111, DOI 10.1177/0038040710367936 Koo JW, 2009, SOC FORCES, V87, P1321 Jakobi AP, 2009, TRANSFORM STATE, P1, DOI 10.1057/9780230245679 Boli J, 2008, INT SOCIOL, V23, P540, DOI 10.1177/0268580908090727 World Bank, 2008, WORLD DEV IND Elliott Michael, 2008, THESIS EMORY U Frank DJ, 2007, THEOR SOC, V36, P287, DOI 10.1007/s11186-007-9035-z Suarez D, 2007, COMP EDUC REV, V51, P48, DOI 10.1086/508638 Marshall Monty, 2007, POLITY 4 PROJECT POL Frank DavidJohn, 2006, RECONSTRUCTING U WOR Ramirez FO, 2006, INT PERSP EDUC SOC, V7, P367, DOI 10.1016/S1479-3679(06)07015-0 Braslavsky Cecilia, 2006, SCH CURRICULA GLOBAL Benavot A., 2006, SCH CURRICULA GLOBAL, P35 Benavot A., 2006, SCH CURRICULA GLOBAL, P173 Schofer E, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P898 Baker David P., 2005, NATL DIFFERENCES GLO Thornton Arland, 2005, READING HIST SIDEWAY Amadio Massimo, 2005, GLOBAL STUDY INTENDE Lie John, 2004, MODERN PEOPLEHOOD Chabbott C., 2003, CONSTRUCTING ED DEV Arum Richard, 2003, JUDGING SCH DISCIPLI Raudenbush S.W., 2002, HIERARCHICAL LINEAR Benavot A, 2001, COMP EDUC REV, V45, P504, DOI 10.1086/447690 Torney-Purta J., 2001, CITIZENSHIP ED 28 CO Meyer JW, 2000, SOCIOL THEOR, V18, P100, DOI 10.1111/0735-2751.00090 Boli John, 1999, CONSTRUCTING WORLD C Meyer JW, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P144 FRANK DJ, 1995, AM SOCIOL REV, V60, P360, DOI 10.2307/2096419 Herzog Elizabeth, 1995, LIFE IS PEOPLE CULTU MEYER JW, 1992, SOCIOL EDUC, V65, P128, DOI 10.2307/2112679 Meyer John W., 1992, SCH KNOWLEDGE MASSES WONG SY, 1991, SOCIOL EDUC, V64, P33, DOI 10.2307/2112890 United Nations, 1989, CONV RIGHTS CHILD Kertzer David, 1989, AGE STRUCTURING COMP, P143 RAVITCH D, 1987, AM SCHOLAR, V56, P343 Habermas J., 1987, THEORY COMMUNICATIVE, V2 Bloom A., 1987, CLOSING AM MIND Zelizer V., 1985, PRICING PRICELESS CH Collins Steven, 1985, CATEGORY PERSON ANTH Willis Paul, 1981, LEARNING LABOR WORKI BOLIBENNETT J, 1978, AM SOCIOL REV, V43, P797, DOI 10.2307/2094622 MEYER JW, 1977, AM J SOCIOL, V83, P55, DOI 10.1086/226506 Bowles S., 1976, SCH CAPITALIST AM Inkeles A., 1974, BECOMING MODERN INDI Illich I., 1971, DESCHOOLING SOC Dreeben R., 1968, WHAT IS LEARNED SCH Swanson G.E., 1967, RELIG REGIME SOCIOLO Tseng S-Y, 1966, HIST CHINESE EXAMINA Durkheim E, 1965, ELEMENTARY FORMS REL Lerner Daniel, 1963, PASSING TRADITIONAL ARIES PHILIPPE, 1962, CENTURIES CHILDHOOD Cline Cohen Patricia, 1962, CALCULATING PEOPLE S Goodman Paul, 1960, GROWING ABSURD Spring Joel, 1980, 1980 ED WORKER CITIZ [Anonymous], YB INT ORG 1970 2008 NR 57 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD DEC PY 2011 VL 90 IS 2 BP 547 EP 570 DI 10.1093/sf/sor004 PG 24 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 889XK UT WOS:000300108800010 ER PT J AU Chen, FNA Liu, GY Mair, CA AF Chen, Feinian Liu, Guangya Mair, Christine A. TI Intergenerational Ties in Context: Grandparents Caring for Grandchildren in China SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID RURAL CHINA; CHILD-CARE; URBAN CHINA; RAISING GRANDCHILDREN; LIVING ARRANGEMENTS; MARRIED CHILDREN; LIFE-COURSE; FAMILY; PATTERNS; GRANDMOTHERS AB Guided by theories and empirical research on intergenerational relationships, we examine the phenomenon of grandparents caring for grandchildren in contemporary China. Using a longitudinal dataset (China Health and Nutrition Survey), we document a high level of structural and functional solidarity in grandparent-grandchildren relationships. Intergenerational solidarity is indicated by a high rate of coresidence between grandchildren and grandparents, a sizable number of skipped-generation households (no parent present), extensive childcare involvement by non-coresidential grandparents, and a large amount of care provided by coresidential grandparents. Multivariate analysis further suggests that grandparents' childcare load is adaptive to familial needs, as reflected by the characteristics of the household, household members and work activities of the mothers. C1 [Chen, Feinian] Univ Maryland, Dept Sociol, College Pk, MD 20742 USA. [Liu, Guangya] N Carolina State Univ, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA. [Mair, Christine A.] Univ Maryland Baltimore Cty, Baltimore, MD 21228 USA. RP Chen, FNA (reprint author), Univ Maryland, Dept Sociol, 2112 Art Sociol Bldg, College Pk, MD 20742 USA EM fchen@socy.umd.edu CR Uhlenberg P, 2009, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V64, P489, DOI 10.1093/geronb/gbp001 Xie Y, 2009, J MARRIAGE FAM, V71, P174, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2008.00588.x Goh ECL, 2009, J AGING STUD, V23, P60, DOI 10.1016/j.jaging.2007.08.001 Hank K, 2009, J FAM ISSUES, V30, P53, DOI 10.1177/0192513X08322627 Swartz TT, 2009, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V35, P191, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.34.040507.134615 Population Reference Bureau, 2009, 2009 WORLD POP DAT S Chen F., 2009, INT HDB POPULATION A, P157, DOI 10.1007/978-1-4020-8356-3_8 Cong Z, 2008, J MARRIAGE FAM, V70, P599, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2008.00508.x Fuller-Thomson E, 2007, HISPANIC J BEHAV SCI, V29, P5, DOI 10.1177/0739986306293680 Silverstein Merril, 2007, NEW PERSPECTIVES CHI, P49 Silverstein M, 2006, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V61, pS256 Korinek K, 2006, J COMP FAM STUD, V37, P191 Croll E, 2006, OXFORD DEV STUDIES, V34, P473, DOI 10.1080/13600810601045833 Gibson PA, 2005, FAM RELAT, V54, P280, DOI 10.1111/j.0197-6664.2005.00022.x Chen FN, 2005, POPUL RES POLICY REV, V24, P125, DOI 10.1007/s11113-004-6371-9 Minkler M, 2005, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V60, pS82 Chen FN, 2004, SOC SCI RES, V33, P557, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2003.09.005 Zhang QF, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P1231 Liang Z, 2004, POPUL DEV REV, V30, P467, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4457.2004.00024.x Lugaila Terry, 2004, CENSUS 2000 SPECIAL Yan Y, 2003, PRIVATE LIFE SOCIALI ZENG Y, 2003, CHINA REV, V3, P95 Whyte Martin K., 2003, CHINAS REVOLUTIONS I, P85 Short SE, 2002, POPUL DEV REV, V28, P31, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4457.2002.00031.x Du SF, 2002, PUBLIC HEALTH NUTR, V5, P169, DOI 10.1079/PHN2001290 National Bureau of Statistics in China, 2002, CHIN STAT YB 2001 Entwisle B, 2002, EUR J POPUL, V18, P99, DOI 10.1023/A:1015507114559 Bengtson VL, 2001, J MARRIAGE FAM, V63, P1, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.00001.x Yan Yungxiang, 2003, POPULATION B UN Gould William, 2001, WHAT IS ESTIMATOR ST Chen F, 2000, POPUL RES POLICY REV, V19, P571, DOI 10.1023/A:1010618302144 Short SE, 2000, POP STUD-J DEMOG, V54, P279, DOI 10.1080/713779090 Logan JR, 1999, SOC FORCES, V77, P1253, DOI 10.2307/3005876 Klerman JA, 1999, DEMOGRAPHY, V36, P145, DOI 10.2307/2648104 Pruchno R, 1999, GERONTOLOGIST, V39, P209 Pebley AR, 1999, J FAM ISSUES, V20, P218, DOI 10.1177/019251399020002003 Logan JR, 1998, SOC FORCES, V76, P851, DOI 10.2307/3005696 Elder GH, 1998, CHILD DEV, V69, P1, DOI 10.2307/1132065 Bian FQ, 1998, DEMOGRAPHY, V35, P115, DOI 10.2307/3004031 Whyte Martin K., 2003, HDB GRANDPARENTHOOD, P167 Hermalin Albert I., 1998, ELDERLY ASIA RES REP Szinovacz Maximiliane E., 1998, HDB GRANDPARENTHOOD, P1 Ikels Charlotte, 1998, HDB GRANDPARENTHOOD, P40 Silverstein Merril, 1998, HDB GRANDPARENTHOOD, P144 Hirshorn Barbara A., 1998, HDB GRANDPARENTHOOD, P200 Knodel John, 1997, ASIA PACIFIC POPULAT, V12, P5 Jacka Tamara, 1997, WOMENS WORK RURAL CH Short SE, 1996, SOC FORCES, V75, P691, DOI 10.2307/2580419 LEE YJ, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V99, P1010, DOI 10.1086/230370 GAO XX, 1994, HARV CON CH, P80 Kawabe Hiroshi, 1994, TRADITION CHANGE ASI, P121 PETERSEN T, 1993, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V19, P425, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.19.1.425 Unger Jonathan, 1993, CHINESE FAMILIES POS, P25 Davis Deborah, 1993, CHINESE FAMILIES POS, P103 WINKLER AE, 1992, J URBAN ECON, V32, P388, DOI 10.1016/0094-1190(92)90026-H LAVELY W, 1992, CHINA QUART, P378 CONNELLY R, 1992, DEMOGRAPHY, V29, P17, DOI 10.2307/2061360 MOEN P, 1992, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V18, P233, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.18.1.233 FALBO T, 1991, MARRIAGE FAM REV, V16, P369, DOI 10.1300/J002v16n03_09 ROBERTS REL, 1991, BEST METHODS FOR THE ANALYSIS OF CHANGE, P170, DOI 10.1037/10099-011 WEINSTEIN M, 1990, POP STUD-J DEMOG, V44, P217, DOI 10.1080/0032472031000144566 HOGAN DP, 1990, SOC FORCES, V68, P797, DOI 10.2307/2579354 TSUI M, 1989, J MARRIAGE FAM, V51, P737, DOI 10.2307/352172 PRESSER HB, 1989, J MARRIAGE FAM, V51, P581, DOI 10.2307/352158 Thornton A., 1987, SOCIOLOGICAL FORUM, V2, P746, DOI 10.1007/BF01124383 Hsiao C., 1986, ANAL PANEL DATA Cherlin A. J., 1986, NEW AM GRANDPARENT P Peres Lisandro, 1986, INT MIGR REV, V22, P4 GREENHALGH S, 1984, CHINA QUART, P529 Parish William L., 1978, VILLAGE FAMILY LIFE Cowgill Donald O., 1972, AGING MODERNIZATION Goode William J., 1970, WORLD REVOLUTION FAM Burgess Ernest W., 1960, AGING W SOC, P3 NR 73 TC 1 Z9 1 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD DEC PY 2011 VL 90 IS 2 BP 571 EP 594 DI 10.1093/sf/sor012 PG 24 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 889XK UT WOS:000300108800011 ER PT J AU Leopold, T Schneider, T AF Leopold, Thomas Schneider, Thorsten TI Family Events and the Timing of Intergenerational Transfers SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID LIFE-COURSE; FINANCIAL TRANSFERS; MULTIPLE IMPUTATION; MISSING VALUES; ADULT CHILDREN; HOME-OWNERSHIP; OLDER PARENTS; UNITED-STATES; SUPPORT; GRANDCHILDREN AB This research investigates how family events in adult children's lives influence the timing of their parents' financial transfers. We draw on retrospective data collected by the German Socio-Economic Panel Study and use event history models to study the effects of marriage, divorce and childbirth on the receipt of large gifts from parents. We find increased chances of receiving real estate at marriage and in subsequent years, at childbirth, but not in the event of divorce. Large gifts of money are received in the years of marriage and divorce, but not at childbirth. Our findings indicate that parental gifts are triggered by adult children's economic need, but also point to a plurality of transfer motives and meanings for parents, adult children and their relationships. C1 [Leopold, Thomas] Univ Bamberg, Chair Populat Studies, D-96045 Bamberg, Germany. [Schneider, Thorsten] Univ Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany. RP Leopold, T (reprint author), Univ Bamberg, Chair Populat Studies, Kapuzinerstr 16, D-96045 Bamberg, Germany EM thomas.leopold@uni-bamberg.de CR Leopold T, 2011, J MARRIAGE FAM, V73, P105, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2010.00792.x Clark S, 2010, SOC FORCES, V88, P1753 Royston P, 2009, STATA J, V9, P252 Royston P, 2009, STATA J, V9, P466 Kohli M, 2008, GLOB WELF, P38 Hank K, 2007, J MARRIAGE FAM, V69, P157, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2006.00351.x Blossfeld Hans-Peter, 2007, EVENT HIST ANAL STAT Wagner Gert G., 2007, J APPL SOCIAL SCI ST, V127, P139 Gans D, 2006, J MARRIAGE FAM, V68, P961, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2006.00307.x Bhaumik Sumon K., 2006, ALLOCATING PUBLIC PR, V2, P89 Cox D, 2005, J PUBLIC ECON, V89, P1665, DOI 10.1016/j.jpubeco.2004.04.005 Eggebeen DJ, 2005, SOC FORCES, V83, P1097, DOI 10.1353/sof.2005.0027 Heuveline P, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P1214, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00088.x Kurz K, 2004, EUR SOCIOL REV, V20, P141, DOI 10.1093/esr/jch009 Kurz K, 2004, HOME OWNERSHIP SOCIA Kohli Martin, 2004, ANN REV GERONTOLOGY, P266 Ploeg J, 2004, CAN J AGING, V23, pS131 Killian Timothy, 2004, J DIVORCE REMARRIAGE, V42, P105, DOI 10.1300/J087v42n01_05 Tomassini C, 2003, J MARRIAGE FAM, V65, P700, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2003.00700.x Kohli Martin, 2003, GLOBAL AGING CHALLEN, P123 Gulbrandsen Lars, 2003, HOUSING THEORY SOC, V20, P137, DOI 10.1080/14036090310017005 Silverstein M, 2002, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V57, pS3 Arrondel L, 2001, SCAND J ECON, V103, P415, DOI 10.1111/1467-9442.00253 Spilerman S, 2000, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V26, P497, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.26.1.497 McGarry K, 1999, J PUBLIC ECON, V73, P321, DOI 10.1016/S0047-2727(99)00017-1 Mulder CH, 1998, URBAN STUD, V35, P687, DOI 10.1080/0042098984709 Sober E., 1998, OTHERS EVOLUTION PSY McGarry K, 1997, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V52, P82 Glazer A, 1996, AM ECON REV, V86, P1019 Wilhelm MO, 1996, AM ECON REV, V86, P874 SILVERSTEIN M, 1995, J MARRIAGE FAM, V57, P465, DOI 10.2307/353699 HOGAN DP, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1428, DOI 10.1086/230194 COONEY TM, 1992, SOC FORCES, V71, P63, DOI 10.2307/2579966 GANZEBOOM HBG, 1992, SOC SCI RES, V21, P1, DOI 10.1016/0049-089X(92)90017-B BENGTSON VL, 1991, J MARRIAGE FAM, V53, P856, DOI 10.2307/352993 ANDREONI J, 1989, J POLIT ECON, V97, P1447, DOI 10.1086/261662 Kotlikoff Laurence J., 1989, EC AGING, P149 COX D, 1987, J POLIT ECON, V95, P508, DOI 10.1086/261470 Rubin DB, 1987, MULTIPLE IMPUTATION Doty Pamela, 1986, MILBANK Q, V64, P35 Shleifer Andrei, 1985, J POLITICAL EC, V93, P1045 Holst Elke, FEMINIST EC IN PRESS, V18 NR 42 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD DEC PY 2011 VL 90 IS 2 BP 595 EP 616 DI 10.1093/sf/sor030 PG 22 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 889XK UT WOS:000300108800012 ER PT J AU Collett, JL AF Collett, Jessica L. TI (Re)Integrating Simmel in Contemporary Social Exchange: The Effect of Nonpartisans on Relational Outcomes SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID PROCEDURAL JUSTICE; FAIRNESS; MODEL; ATTRIBUTIONS; PERCEPTIONS; COMMITMENT; RESOLUTION; AUTHORITY; CONFLICT; INEQUITY AB Despite the increased prevalence of neutral third parties in both formal and informal exchange processes, social exchange theory has yet to consider the effect of nonpartisans on important cognitive and affective outcomes of exchange. This research integrates Simmel's conceptualization of small groups and nonpartisans with contemporary theory and research in social exchange to explore how different levels of neutral third party intervention in an exchange process affect the "relational outcomes" of exchange (perceptions of fairness of, general positive regard toward, the exchange partner and optimism about the tone of future interactions). Experimental results indicate that increased third party intervention is positively related to favorable relational outcomes. The increased likelihood of external attributions and decreased salience of conflict associated with high levels of third-party intervention partially explain this result. C1 Univ Notre Dame, Dept Sociol, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA. RP Collett, JL (reprint author), Univ Notre Dame, Dept Sociol, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA EM jlcollett@nd.edu CR Molm LD, 2009, SOCIOL THEOR, V27, P1, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9558.2009.00336.x Lawler EJ, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P519 Molm LD, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P205, DOI 10.1086/517900 Molm Linda D., 2006, CONT SOCIAL PSYCHOL, P24 Morrill Calvin, 2006, I CHANGE INTERSTITIA Molm Linda D., 2006, SOC FORCES, V84, P2325 Lucas JW, 2003, SOCIOL THEOR, V21, P236, DOI 10.1111/1467-9558.00187 Blader SL, 2003, PERS SOC PSYCHOL B, V29, P747, DOI 10.1177/0146167203252811 Molm LD, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P128, DOI 10.2307/3088905 Sternlight Jean R., 2003, NEV L J, V3, P289 Hegtvedt Karen A., 2003, SOC JUSTICE RES, V16, P343, DOI 10.1023/A:1026309615276 Cropanzano R, 2002, GROUP ORGAN MANAGE, V27, P324, DOI 10.1177/1059601102027003002 Tyler Tom, 2002, HDB DISPUTE RESOLUTI, P19 Lawler EJ, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P321, DOI 10.1086/324071 Bies R. J., 2001, ADV ORG JUSTICE, P89 Iacobucci Dawn, 2001, J CONSUM PSYCHOL, V10, P55 Toews Michelle, 2001, J DIVORCE REMARRIAGE, V35, P57, DOI 10.1300/J087v35n01_03 Bobocel D. Ramona, 2001, RES SOCIAL ISSUES MA, P85 Hegtvedt KA, 2000, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V63, P298, DOI 10.2307/2695841 Lawler EJ, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P616, DOI 10.1086/318965 Hegtvedt KA, 1999, SOC FORCES, V78, P269, DOI 10.2307/3005797 Lawler EJ, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P871, DOI 10.2307/2657506 Tyler T. R., 1997, SOCIAL JUSTICE DIVER Burgess Heidi, 1997, ENCY CONFLICT RESOLU Decker Keith, 1997, P 15 INT JOINT C ART, P578 Tyler T, 1996, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V70, P913, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.70.5.913 Lawler EJ, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P89, DOI 10.2307/2096408 BLOUNT S, 1995, ORGAN BEHAV HUM DEC, V63, P131, DOI 10.1006/obhd.1995.1068 Molm L., 1995, SOCIOL PERSPECT, P209 LAWLER EJ, 1993, AM SOCIOL REV, V58, P465, DOI 10.2307/2096071 LIND EA, 1993, ADMIN SCI QUART, V38, P224, DOI 10.2307/2393412 HEGTVEDT KA, 1993, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V56, P100, DOI 10.2307/2787000 Browne M. W., 1993, TESTING STRUCTURAL E, P136 KARAMBAYYA R, 1992, ACAD MANAGE J, V35, P426, DOI 10.2307/256381 THOMPSON L, 1992, ORGAN BEHAV HUM DEC, V51, P176, DOI 10.1016/0749-5978(92)90010-5 TYLER TR, 1992, ADV EXP SOC PSYCHOL, V25, P115, DOI 10.1016/S0065-2601(08)60283-X JACOB H, 1992, LAW SOC REV, V26, P565, DOI 10.2307/3053738 Melli Marygold S., 1991, ENCY MATRIMONIAL PRA, P286 KARAMBAYYA R, 1989, ACAD MANAGE J, V32, P687, DOI 10.2307/256564 Bollen KA, 1989, STRUCTURAL EQUATIONS Lind E.A., 1988, SOCIAL PSYCHOL PROCE SHEPELAK NJ, 1987, AM SOCIOL REV, V52, P495, DOI 10.2307/2095294 HASSEBRAUCK M, 1987, EUR J SOC PSYCHOL, V17, P295, DOI 10.1002/ejsp.2420170305 ERLANGER HS, 1987, LAW SOC REV, V21, P585, DOI 10.2307/3053597 GREENBERG J, 1986, J APPL PSYCHOL, V71, P340, DOI 10.1037/0021-9010.71.2.340 Bies R. J., 1986, RES NEGOTIATION ORG, V1, P43 Atoji Toshio, 1984, SOCIOLOGICA, V9, P12 Folger Robert, 1983, BASIC GROUP PROCESSE, P235 FISHER RJ, 1983, J CONFLICT RESOLUT, V27, P301, DOI 10.1177/0022002783027002005 Cohen Ronald L., 1982, EQUITY JUSTICE SOCIA, P119 Leventhal G. S., 1980, JUSTICE SOCIAL INTER BENTLER PM, 1980, PSYCHOL BULL, V88, P588, DOI 10.1037/0033-2909.88.3.588 THIBAUT J, 1978, CALIF LAW REV, V66, P541, DOI 10.2307/3480099 Kidd Robert F., 1978, LAW HUMAN BEHAV, V2, P301, DOI 10.1007/BF01038983 FOLGER R, 1977, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V35, P108, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.35.2.108 Leventhal G.S., 1976, CONT TOPICS SOCIAL P, P211 Thibaut J., 1975, PROCEDURAL JUSTICE P Emerson RM, 1972, SOCIOLOGICAL THEORIE, V2, P58 Emerson RM, 1972, SOCIOLOGICAL THEORIE, V2, P38 Kelley H. H., 1972, ATTRIBUTION PERCEIV, P1 Zelditch Jr. Morris, 1969, SOCIOLOGICAL READER, P528 JONES EE, 1965, ADV EXP SOC PSYCHOL, V2, P219 Blau P.M, 1964, EXCHANGE POWER SOCIA Simmel G, 1964, SOCIOLOGY G SIMMEL Homans G., 1961, SOCIAL BEHAV ITS ELE Heider F, 1958, PSYCHOL INTERPERSONA NR 66 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD DEC PY 2011 VL 90 IS 2 BP 617 EP 637 DI 10.1093/sf/sor029 PG 21 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 889XK UT WOS:000300108800013 ER PT J AU Yoon, J Thye, S AF Yoon, Jeongkoo Thye, Shane TI A Theoretical Model and New Test of Managerial Legitimacy in Work Teams SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID PERCEIVED ORGANIZATIONAL SUPPORT; SELF-MANAGEMENT; COLLECTIVE ACTION; EMPIRICAL-TEST; LEADERSHIP; EFFICACY; EMPOWERMENT; PERFORMANCE; WORKPLACE; INSTITUTIONALISM AB This study examines endorsement and authorization as two social mechanisms that can induce perceptions of legitimacy for individuals who manage work teams. Endorsement is the support of a manager by one's own team members, whereas authorization is the support of a team manager stemming from a higher bureaucratic level. Applying these mechanisms to specific work teams we hypothesize that (1. a team member who observes that other team members endorse a manager and the upper management authorizes the manager will perceive that manager's acts to be more legitimate; (2. in the context of the team environment the effect of endorsement will be greater than that of authorization; and (3. perceived legitimacy will mediate the effects of endorsement and authorization on positive outcomes such as team members' efficacy and commitment. These hypotheses were tested using 320 respondents from 56 Korean work teams. The results provide overall support of these hypotheses. As predicted, endorsement and authorization are key mechanisms significantly enhancing legitimacy. Further, the effect of endorsement on legitimacy is greater than that of authorization, and legitimacy partially mediates the effects of both endorsement and authorization on team efficacy and commitment. The implications of these findings are discussed in the context of prevailing theories of legitimacy. C1 [Yoon, Jeongkoo] Ewha Womans Univ, Sch Business Adm, Seoul, South Korea. [Thye, Shane] Univ S Carolina, Dept Sociol, Columbia, SC 29208 USA. RP Yoon, J (reprint author), Ewha Womans Univ, Sch Business Adm, Seoul, South Korea EM jkyoon@ewha.ac.kr; srthye@sc.edu CR Lawler Edward J., 2009, SOCIAL COMMITMENTS D Srivastava A, 2006, ACAD MANAGE J, V49, P1239 Tyler TR, 2006, ANNU REV PSYCHOL, V57, P375, DOI 10.1146/annurev.psych.57.102904.190038 Mathieu JE, 2006, J APPL PSYCHOL, V91, P97, DOI 10.1037/0021-9010.91.1.97 Cappelli Peter, 2006, WORK OCCUPATION, V33, P1 Cho J, 2004, INT LABOUR REV, V143, P373, DOI 10.1111/j.1564-913X.2004.tb00554.x Walker Henry, 2004, LEGITIMACY PROCESSES, P239 Johansson AC, 2004, RES SOC ORG, V22, P89 Vallas SP, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P223, DOI 10.2307/1519767 Jung In-Soo, 2003, CHANGE INTERNAL LABO Zelditch M, 2003, ADV GROUP PROCESS, V20, P217, DOI 10.1006/S0882-6145(03)20008-4 Gully SM, 2002, J APPL PSYCHOL, V87, P819, DOI 10.1037//0021-9010.87.5.819 Rhoades L, 2002, J APPL PSYCHOL, V87, P698, DOI 10.1037//0021-9010.87.4.698 Pearce CL, 2002, GROUP DYN-THEOR RES, V6, P172, DOI 10.1037//1089-2699.6.2.172 Lawler EJ, 2002, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V65, P4, DOI 10.2307/3090165 Yoon J, 2002, WORK OCCUPATION, V29, P97, DOI 10.1177/0730888402029001005 Yoon J, 2001, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V64, P195, DOI 10.2307/3090133 Hibbard JD, 2001, J MARKETING RES, V38, P45, DOI 10.1509/jmkr.38.1.45.18831 Taplin IM, 2001, RES SOC WOR, V10, P1 Powell Walter W., 2001, 21 CENTURY FIRM CHAN, P33 Bishop JW, 2000, J APPL PSYCHOL, V85, P439, DOI 10.1037//0021-9010.85.3.439 Choi Y, 1999, LEADERSHIP QUART, V10, P397, DOI 10.1016/S1048-9843(99)00025-9 Yoon J, 1999, HUM RELAT, V52, P923, DOI 10.1177/001872679905200704 Gibson CB, 1999, ACAD MANAGE J, V42, P138, DOI 10.2307/257089 Kirkman BL, 1999, ACAD MANAGE J, V42, P58, DOI 10.2307/256874 Thompson Leigh L., 1999, MAKING TEAM Berger J, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P379, DOI 10.2307/2657555 Cohen SG, 1997, PERS PSYCHOL, V50, P275, DOI 10.1111/j.1744-6570.1997.tb00909.x Greenwood R, 1996, ACAD MANAGE REV, V21, P1022, DOI 10.2307/259163 Kraatz MS, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P812, DOI 10.2307/2096455 Yoon Jeongkoo, 1996, J APPL SOC PSYCHOL, V26, P687 LINDSLEY DH, 1995, ACAD MANAGE REV, V20, P645, DOI 10.2307/258790 KATZENBACH JR, 1993, HARVARD BUS REV, V71, P111 Joreskog K. G., 1993, LISREL 8 STRUCTURAL Lawler Edward J., 1993, SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY, V11, P268, DOI 10.2307/201971 MANZ CC, 1992, HUM RELAT, V45, P1119, DOI 10.1177/001872679204501101 Lawler E.E., 1992, ULTIMATE ADVANTAGE C SHORE LM, 1991, J APPL PSYCHOL, V76, P637, DOI 10.1037/0021-9010.76.5.637 MANZ CC, 1991, ORGAN DYN, V19, P18, DOI 10.1016/0090-2616(91)90051-A ORTON JD, 1990, ACAD MANAGE REV, V15, P203, DOI 10.2307/258154 Hackman J.R., 1990, GROUPS WORK THOSE DO Kilmann Ralph H., 1989, CORPORATE TTRANSFORM WILLIAMS LJ, 1989, RES ORGAN BEHAV, V11, P247 Ridgeway Cecilia, 1989, SOCIOLOGICAL THEORIE, P131 WALKER HA, 1988, SOC FORCES, V67, P216, DOI 10.2307/2579108 ANDERSON JC, 1988, PSYCHOL BULL, V103, P411, DOI 10.1037/0033-2909.103.3.411 Hackman JR, 1987, HDB ORG BEHAV, P315 THOMAS GM, 1986, SOC FORCES, V65, P378, DOI 10.2307/2578679 RIDGEWAY CL, 1986, AM SOCIOL REV, V51, P603, DOI 10.2307/2095487 EISENBERGER R, 1986, J APPL PSYCHOL, V71, P500, DOI 10.1037/0021-9010.71.3.500 WALKER HA, 1986, SOC FORCES, V64, P620, DOI 10.2307/2578816 WIDAMAN KF, 1985, APPL PSYCH MEAS, V9, P1, DOI 10.1177/014662168500900101 DAFT RL, 1984, ACAD MANAGE REV, V9, P284, DOI 10.2307/258441 HANNAN MT, 1984, AM SOCIOL REV, V49, P149, DOI 10.2307/2095567 BARON JN, 1984, AM SOCIOL REV, V49, P454, DOI 10.2307/2095462 Lawlet Edward, 1984, ADV GROUP PROCESSES, V1, P1 DIMAGGIO PJ, 1983, AM SOCIOL REV, V48, P147, DOI 10.2307/2095101 BANDURA A, 1982, AM PSYCHOL, V37, P122, DOI 10.1037//0003-066X.37.2.122 James L.R., 1982, CAUSAL ANAL ASSUMPTI Mowday R.T., 1982, ORG LINKAGES PSYCHOL BENTLER PM, 1980, PSYCHOL BULL, V88, P588, DOI 10.1037/0033-2909.88.3.588 Hackman J, 1980, WORK REDESIGN Kenny D. A., 1979, CORRELATION CAUSALIT Weick K, 1979, SOCIAL PSYCHOL ORG MEYER JW, 1977, AM J SOCIOL, V83, P340, DOI 10.1086/226550 Dornbusch S. M., 1975, EVALUATION EXERCISE TUCKER LR, 1973, PSYCHOMETRIKA, V38, P1, DOI 10.1007/BF02291170 BURT RS, 1973, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V2, P131, DOI 10.1177/004912417300200201 Doeringer P., 1971, INTERNAL LABOR MARKE Weber Max, 1968, EC SOC, V3 Berger PL, 1966, SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION Etzioni Amitai, 1961, COMP ANAL COMPLEX OR Hollander Edwin P., 1960, J ABNORMAL SOCIAL PS, V61, P361 Festinger L, 1957, THEORY COGNITIVE DIS NR 74 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD DEC PY 2011 VL 90 IS 2 BP 639 EP 659 DI 10.1093/sf/sor016 PG 21 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 889XK UT WOS:000300108800014 ER PT J AU Hamilton, ER Villarreal, A AF Hamilton, Erin R. Villarreal, Andres TI Development and the Urban and Rural Geography of Mexican Emigration to the United States SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION; CUMULATIVE CAUSATION; LABOR MIGRATION; US MIGRATION; URBANIZATION; IMMIGRATION AB Past research on international migration from Mexico to the United States uses geographically-limited data and analyzes emigrant-sending communities in isolation. Theories supported by this research may not explain urban emigration, and this research does not consider connections between rural and urban Mexico. In this study we use national data from Mexico to investigate rural and urban emigration. We find that a central motivation for emigration - self-insurance through labor market diversification - is most relevant to less rural, non-metropolitan places. Paradoxically, while Mexican cities have the lowest rates of emigration, the rural places that are spatially proximate to cities have the highest rates. These findings suggest that while urban development retains emigrants within city borders, it may generate emigration out of neighboring rural places. C1 [Hamilton, Erin R.] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Sociol, Davis, CA 95616 USA. [Villarreal, Andres] Univ Texas Austin, Austin, TX 78712 USA. RP Hamilton, ER (reprint author), Univ Calif Davis, Dept Sociol, 1 Shields Ave, Davis, CA 95616 USA EM erhamilton@ucdavis.edu CR Hanson GH, 2010, REV ECON STAT, V92, P798, DOI 10.1162/REST_a_00031 HernandezLeon R, 2008, METROPOLITAN MIGRANTS: THE MIGRATION OF URBAN MEXICANS TO THE UNITED STATES, P1 Roberts Bryan R., 2007, PAIS TRANSNACIONAL M, P83 Ibarraran Pablo, 2007, MEXICAN IMMIGRATION, P193 United Nations, 2007, WORLD URB PROSP 2006 Beck N, 2006, INT STUD QUART, V50, P27, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-2478.2006.00391.x Stecklov G, 2005, DEMOGRAPHY, V42, P769, DOI 10.1353/dem.2005.0037 Portes A, 2005, STUD COMP INT DEV, V40, P43, DOI 10.1007/BF02686288 Tuiran Rodolfo, 2005, COMPLETING FERTILITY, P483 Fussell E, 2004, DEMOGRAPHY, V41, P151, DOI 10.1353/dem.2004.0003 Secretaria de Desarollo Social Consejo Nacional de Poblacion, 2004, DEL ZON METR MEX Lozano Ascencio Fernando, 2004, MIGRACIONES INT, V2, P34 Garza Gustavo, 2004, NEW FORMS URBANIZATI, P153 Bouillon CP, 2003, J DEV STUD, V39, P112, DOI 10.1080/713869428 Morenoff JD, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V108, P976, DOI 10.1086/374405 Anselin L, 2003, GEODA 0 9 USERS GUID Durand J., 2003, CLANDESTINOS MIGRACI Instituto Nacional de Estadistica Geografia e Informatica, 2002, AN EST EST OAX Sassen Saskia, 2002, GLOBAL NETWORKS LINK, P1 Parnreiter Cristof, 2002, GLOBAL NETWORKS LINK, P145 Villalvazo Pena P., 2002, REV INFORM ANALISIS, V20, P17 Lindstrom DP, 2001, INT MIGR REV, V35, P1232 Marcelli EA, 2001, LAT AM RES REV, V36, P105 Durand J, 2001, LAT AM RES REV, V36, P107 Consejo Nacional de Poblacion, 2000, IND MARG Massey Douglas S., 1999, HDB INT MIGRATION AM, P34 Kritz M M, 1998, Int J Popul Geogr, V4, P243, DOI 10.1002/(SICI)1099-1220(199809)4:3<243::AID-IJPG86>3.0.CO;2-6 Portes A, 1997, INT MIGR REV, V31, P799, DOI 10.2307/2547415 Massey DS, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P939, DOI 10.1086/231037 HATTON TJ, 1994, POPUL DEV REV, V20, P533, DOI 10.2307/2137600 MASSEY DS, 1993, POPUL DEV REV, V19, P431, DOI 10.2307/2938462 MASSEY DS, 1990, POPUL INDEX, V56, P3, DOI 10.2307/3644186 BEAN FD, 1990, UNDOCUMENTED MIGRATION TO THE UNITED STATES, P111 MASSEY DS, 1988, POPUL DEV REV, V14, P383, DOI 10.2307/1972195 Anselin L., 1988, SPATIAL ECONOMETRICS Sassen S., 1988, MOBILITY LABOR CAPIT Taylor J. Edward, 1986, RES HUMAN CAPITAL DE, P147 STARK O, 1985, AM ECON REV, V75, P173 TODARO MP, 1969, AM ECON REV, V59, P138 GIBBS JP, 1962, AM SOCIOL REV, V27, P667, DOI 10.2307/2089624 Lewis W. Arthur, 1954, MANCHESTER SCH EC SO, V22, P139, DOI DOI 10.1111/J.1467-9957.1954.TB00021.X NR 41 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD DEC PY 2011 VL 90 IS 2 BP 661 EP 683 DI 10.1093/sf/sor011 PG 23 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 889XK UT WOS:000300108800015 ER PT J AU Offer, S Schneider, B AF Offer, Shira Schneider, Barbara TI Revisiting the Gender Gap in Time-Use Patterns: Multitasking and Well-Being among Mothers and Fathers in Dual-Earner Families SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE multitasking; well-being; work-family conflict; dual-earner families; Experience Sampling Method ID HOUSEHOLD LABOR; UNITED-STATES; WORK; CONFLICT; LIFE; EXPERIENCE; AUSTRALIA; CHILDREN; DIVISION; FACILITATION AB This study suggests that multitasking constitutes an important source of gender inequality, which can help explain previous findings that mothers feel more burdened and stressed than do fathers even when they have relatively similar workloads. Using data from the 500 Family Study, including surveys and the Experience Sampling Method, the study examines activities parents simultaneously engage in and how they feel when multitasking. We find that mothers spend 10 more hours a week multitasking compared to fathers and that these additional hours are mainly related to time spent on housework and childcare. For mothers, multitasking activities at home and in public are associated with an increase in negative emotions, stress, psychological distress, and work-family conflict. By contrast, fathers' multitasking at home involves less housework and childcare and is not a negative experience. We also find several similarities by gender. Mothers' and fathers' multitasking in the company of a spouse or children are positive experiences, whereas multitasking at work, although associated with an increased sense of productivity, is perceived as a negative experience. C1 [Offer, Shira] Bar Ilan Univ, Dept Sociol & Anthropol, IL-52900 Ramat Gan, Israel. [Schneider, Barbara] Michigan State Univ, Coll Educ, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA. [Schneider, Barbara] Michigan State Univ, Dept Sociol, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA. RP Offer, S (reprint author), Bar Ilan Univ, Dept Sociol & Anthropol, Mexico Bldg,Room 404, IL-52900 Ramat Gan, Israel EM shira.offer@biu.ac.il CR Drago RW, 2010, MON LABOR REV, V133, P17 Craig L, 2010, WORK EMPLOY SOC, V24, P27, DOI 10.1177/0950017009353778 Williams J. C., 2010, 3 FACES WORK FAMILY Nelson M. K., 2010, PARENTING OUT CONTRO Schneider Barbara, 2010, WORKPLACE FLEXIBILIT, P1 Bianchi Suzanne M., 2010, WORKPLACE FLEXIBILIT, P14 Schieman S, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P966 Schneider BL, 2009, SOC INDIC RES, V93, P105, DOI 10.1007/s11205-008-9410-9 Sayer LC, 2009, J COMP FAM STUD, V40, P523 Nomaguchi KM, 2009, J MARRIAGE FAM, V71, P15, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2008.00577.x King Gary, 2009, AMELIA Craig L, 2008, FEM ECON, V14, P59, DOI 10.1080/13545700701880999 Burgess P. W., 2008, PROSPECTIVE MEMORY C, P235 Spink A, 2008, ANNU REV INFORM SCI, V42, P93 Hektner J. M., 2007, EXPERIENCE SAMPLING Craig Lyn, 2007, FEMINIST REV, V86, P149, DOI 10.1057/palgrave.fr.9400339 Maume DJ, 2007, RES SOCIOL WORK, V17, P251, DOI 10.1016/S0277-2833(07)17008-4 Varney Ann, 2007, ABC NEWS 0814 Darrah Charles N., 2007, BUSIER EVER WHY AM F Sayer Liana C., 2007, COMPETITION DISTURBE, P41 Sayer Liana C., 2007, WORKPLACE TEMPORALIT, V17, P405 Craig L, 2006, GENDER SOC, V20, P259, DOI 10.1177/0891243205285212 Roxburgh S, 2006, J FAM ISSUES, V27, P529, DOI 10.1177/0192513X05284008 Wharton AS, 2006, J FAM ISSUES, V27, P415, DOI 10.1177/0192513X05282985 Mattingly MJ, 2006, J MARRIAGE FAM, V68, P205, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2006.00242.x Schneider B, 2006, WORK FAMILY HDB MULT, P469 Bianchi Suzanne M., 2006, CHANGING RHYTHM AM F Wallis Claudia, 2006, TIME MAGAZINE 0327 Hill EJ, 2005, J FAM ISSUES, V26, P793, DOI 10.1177/0192513X05277542 Winslow S, 2005, J FAM ISSUES, V26, P727, DOI 10.1177/0192513X05277522 Lee YS, 2005, J MARRIAGE FAM, V67, P328, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2005.00119.x Schneider B., 2005, BEING TOGETHER WORKI Bellavia Gina M., 2005, HDB WORK STRESS, P113 Hoogstra Lisa, 2005, BEING TOGETHER WORKI, P23 Schneider Barbara, 2005, ELECT INT J TIME USE, V2, P33 Backon Lois, 2005, OVERWORK AM WAY WE W Milkie MA, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P739, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00050.x Roxburgh S, 2004, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V45, P115 Voydanoff P, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P398, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2004.00028.x Jacobs J. A., 2004, TIME DIVIDE WORK FAM Raudenbush S., 2004, HLM Ironmonger Duncan, 2004, FAMILY TIME SOCIAL O, P93 Healy Melissa, 2004, LOS ANGELES TIM 0719 Mattingly MJ, 2003, SOC FORCES, V81, P999, DOI 10.1353/sof.2003.0036 Lareau A., 2003, UNEQUAL CHILDHOODS C Presser Harriet B., 2003, WORKING 24 7 EC CHAL Blair-Loy M., 2003, COMPETING DEVOTIONS Gornick J.C., 2003, FAMILIES WORK POLICI Raudenbush S.W., 2002, HIERARCHICAL LINEAR Roxburgh Susan, 2002, J FAMILY EC ISSUES, V23, P121, DOI DOI 10.1023/A:1015734516575 Daly J. Kerry, 2002, SYMB INTERACT, V25, P323 Rubinstein JS, 2001, J EXP PSYCHOL HUMAN, V27, P763, DOI 10.1037//0096-1523.27.4.763 Arendell Teresa, 2001, MINDING TIME FAMILY, V3, P163 Coltrane S, 2000, J MARRIAGE FAM, V62, P1208, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2000.01208.x Bianchi SM, 2000, SOC FORCES, V79, P191, DOI 10.2307/2675569 Bittman M, 2000, SOC FORCES, V79, P165, DOI 10.2307/2675568 Moen P, 2000, SOC PROBL, V47, P291, DOI 10.1525/sp.2000.47.3.03x0294h Williams J., 2000, UNBENDING GENDER WHY Burgess PW, 2000, NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, V38, P848, DOI 10.1016/S0028-3932(99)00134-7 Burgess P. W., 2000, CONTROL COGNITIVE PR, VXVIII, P465 Twiggs JE, 1999, J MARRIAGE FAM, V61, P712, DOI 10.2307/353572 Milkie MA, 1999, J MARRIAGE FAM, V61, P476, DOI 10.2307/353763 DeVault ML, 1999, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V561, P52, DOI 10.1177/0002716299561001004 Frone MR, 1997, J VOCAT BEHAV, V50, P145, DOI 10.1006/jvbe.1996.1577 Hochschild A.R., 1997, TIME BIND WORK BECOM Zick CD, 1996, SOC SCI RES, V25, P260, DOI 10.1006/ssre.1996.0012 Hays S., 1996, CULTURAL CONTRADICTI ROGERS RD, 1995, J EXP PSYCHOL GEN, V124, P207, DOI 10.1037//0096-3445.124.2.207 HESSING M, 1994, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V37, P611 PRESSER HB, 1994, AM SOCIOL REV, V59, P348, DOI 10.2307/2095938 Larson R. W., 1994, DIVERGENT REALITIES MARINI MM, 1993, SOC SCI RES, V22, P361, DOI 10.1006/ssre.1993.1018 Hochschild A., 1989, 2 SHIFT COHEN S, 1988, CLAR SYMP, P31 CSIKSZENTMIHALYI M, 1987, J NERV MENT DIS, V175, P526, DOI 10.1097/00005053-198709000-00004 RADLOFF L S, 1977, Applied Psychological Measurement, V1, P385, DOI 10.1177/014662167700100306 NR 76 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD DEC PY 2011 VL 76 IS 6 BP 809 EP 833 DI 10.1177/0003122411425170 PG 25 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 855JP UT WOS:000297560600001 ER PT J AU Craig, L Mullan, K AF Craig, Lyn Mullan, Killian TI How Mothers and Fathers Share Childcare: A Cross-National Time-Use Comparison SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE comparative analysis; cross-national comparison; fathers' childcare; gender; mothers' childcare; shares of childcare; time use ID DIVISION-OF-LABOR; HOUSEHOLD LABOR; GENDER INEQUALITY; FAMILY RESEARCH; WELFARE STATES; UNITED-STATES; UNPAID WORK; FRANCE; HOME; COUNTRIES AB In most families today, childcare remains divided unequally between fathers and mothers. Scholars argue that persistence of the gendered division of childcare is due to multiple causes, including values about gender and family, disparities in paid work, class, and social context. It is likely that all of these factors interact, but to date researchers have not explored such interactions. To address this gap, we analyze nationally representative time-use data from Australia, Denmark, France, and Italy. These countries have different employment patterns, social and family policies, and cultural attitudes toward parenting and gender equality. Using data from matched married couples, we conduct a cross-national study of mothers' and fathers' relative time in childcare, divided along dimensions of task (i.e., routine versus non-routine activities) and co-presence (i.e., caring for children together as a couple versus caring solo). Results show that mothers' and fathers' work arrangements and education relate modestly to shares of childcare, and this relationship differs across countries. We find cross-national variation in whether more equal shares result from the behavior of mothers, fathers, or both spouses. Results illustrate the relevance of social context in accentuating or minimizing the impact of individual- and household-level characteristics. C1 [Craig, Lyn; Mullan, Killian] Univ New S Wales, Social Policy Res Ctr, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia. RP Craig, L (reprint author), Univ New S Wales, Social Policy Res Ctr, G2 Western Campus, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia EM lcraig@unsw.edu.au CR Gornick Janet, 2011, EUROPEAN SOCIOLOGICA, DOI [10.1093/esr/jcr008, DOI 10.1093/ESR/JCR008] Pasqua Silvia, 2011, 11005 ZEW CTR EUR EC Craig L, 2010, J MARRIAGE FAM, V72, P1344, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2010.00769.x Bianchi SM, 2010, J MARRIAGE FAM, V72, P705, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2010.00726.x Ferree MM, 2010, J MARRIAGE FAM, V72, P420, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2010.00711.x Wall G, 2010, WOMEN STUD INT FORUM, V33, P253, DOI 10.1016/j.wsif.2010.02.019 Hook JL, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P1480 Mullan Killian, 2010, WORK EMPLOY SOC, V24, P1 Cameron Colin A., 2010, HDB EMPIRICAL EC FIN, P1 Craig L, 2009, GENDER WORK ORGAN, V16, P684, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0432.2009.00481.x White LA, 2009, INT POLIT SCI REV, V30, P385, DOI 10.1177/0192512109340055 Orloff AS, 2009, SOCIOL THEOR, V27, P317 Lewis J, 2009, WORK-FAMILY BALANCE, GENDER AND POLICY, P1 Meyers Marcia, 2009, GENDER EQUALITY TRAN, V4 Kendig SM, 2008, J MARRIAGE FAM, V70, P1228, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2008.00562.x Borchorst A, 2008, FEM THEOR, V9, P207, DOI 10.1177/1464700108090411 Almqvist A.-L., 2008, FATHERING J THEORY R, V6, P192, DOI 10.3149/fth.0602.192 Bittman Michael, 2008, FEMINIST EC, V14, P57 Shaw Susan, 2008, SOCIOLOGY COMPASS, V2, P688, DOI 10.1111/j.1751-9020.2007.00076.x Australia Bureau of Statistics, 2008, TIM US SURV 2006 Vincent C, 2007, SOCIOLOGY, V41, P1061, DOI 10.1177/0038038507082315 McDowell T, 2007, J FAM ISSUES, V28, P549, DOI 10.1177/0192513X06297331 Craig Lyn, 2007, CONT MOTHERHOOD IMPA OECD, 2007, BAB BOSS REC WORK FA Hausmann R., 2007, GLOBAL GENDER GAP RE Sanz Almudena Sevilla, 2007, U OXFORD EC SERIES W Craig Lyn, 2007, J FAMILY EC ISSUES, V28, P69, DOI DOI 10.1007/S10834-006-9047-2 National Institute of Statistics (ISTAT), 2007, US TEMP IND MULT FAM BAXTER J, 2007, MOTHERS FATHERS YOUN Coltrane Scott, 2007, REAL UTOPIAS, P385 Folbre Nancy, 2007, VALUING CHILDREN RET Hook JL, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P639 Craig L, 2006, GENDER SOC, V20, P259, DOI 10.1177/0891243205285212 Bianchi S. M., 2006, CHANGING RHYTHMS AM Crompton R, 2006, EMPLOYMENT AND THE FAMILY: THE RECONFIGURATION OF WORK AND FAMILY LIFE IN CONTEMPORARY SOCIETIES, P1, DOI 10.2277/ 0521600758 DEDING M, 2006, ELECT INT J TIME USE, V3, P28 Craig Lyn, 2006, SOCIOLOGY, V57, P553 Maitland Aaron, 2006, 328 NBER Buis Martin, 2006, 12 UK STAT US GROUP Baxter J, 2005, J COMP FAM STUD, V36, P583 Morgan KJ, 2005, SOC POLIT, V12, P243, DOI 10.1093/sp/jxi013 McCall L, 2005, SIGNS, V30, P1771, DOI 10.1086/426800 Geist C, 2005, EUR SOCIOL REV, V21, P23, DOI 10.1093/esr/jci002 Bonke J, 2005, SOC INDIC RES, V70, P349, DOI 10.1007/s11205-004-1547-6 Bergmann BR, 2005, ECONOMIC EMERGENCE OF WOMEN, SECOND EDITION, P1, DOI 10.1057/9781403982582 Warner Judith, 2005, PERFECT MADNESS MOTH Fuwa M, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P751 Fagnani J, 2004, WORK EMPLOY SOC, V18, P551, DOI 10.1177/0950017004045550 Sayer LC, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P1, DOI 10.1086/386270 Bittman Michael, 2004, FAMILY TIME SOCIAL O, P133 Miller Pavla, 2004, J POPULATION RES, V21, P199 Fuligni AS, 2004, CONCEPTUALIZING AND MEASURING FATHER INVOLVEMENT, P341 Short Susan E., 2004, POPUL DEV REV, V30, P109 Bittman M, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P186, DOI 10.1086/378341 Gornick J.C., 2003, FAMILIES WORK POLICI Haas Linda, 2003, REV POLICY RES, V20, P89, DOI 10.1111/1541-1338.00006 Wisensale Steven, 2003, REV POLICY RES, V20, P135, DOI 10.1111/1541-1338.00008 Edwards Rosalind, 2003, THOUGHTS FAMILY GEND, P1 Morgan KJ, 2003, WORLD POLIT, V55, P259, DOI 10.1353/wp.2003.0013 Arts W, 2002, J EUR SOC POLICY, V12, P137 Hobson B., 2002, MAKING MEN FATHERS M Danish National Institute for Social Research (SFI), 2002, DAN TIM US SURV 2002 Windebank J, 2001, WORK EMPLOY SOC, V15, P269, DOI 10.1017/S0950017001000150 Sandberg John, 2001, J MARRIAGE FAM, V63, P136 Hofferth S. L, 2001, WOMENS EMPLOYMENT CO, P151 Coltrane S, 2000, J MARRIAGE FAM, V62, P1208, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2000.01208.x Bianchi SM, 2000, SOC FORCES, V79, P191, DOI 10.2307/2675569 Greenstein TN, 2000, J MARRIAGE FAM, V62, P322, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2000.00322.x Lareau A, 2000, CHILDHOOD, V7, P155, DOI 10.1177/0907568200007002003 Allen SM, 1999, J MARRIAGE FAM, V61, P199, DOI 10.2307/353894 Rubery J., 1999, WOMENS EMPLOYMENT EU National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies (INSEE), 1999, EMPL TEMP 1998 1999 Hays Sharon, 1998, CULTURAL CONTRADICTI Robinson J. P., 1997, TIME LIFE SURPRISING Papke LE, 1996, J APPL ECONOM, V11, P619, DOI 10.1002/(SICI)1099-1255(199611)11:6<619::AID-JAE418>3.0.CO;2-1 Lundberg S, 1996, J ECON PERSPECT, V10, P139 BRINES J, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V100, P652, DOI 10.1086/230577 Becker Gary S., 1981, TREATISE FAMILY NR 78 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD DEC PY 2011 VL 76 IS 6 BP 834 EP 861 DI 10.1177/0003122411427673 PG 28 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 855JP UT WOS:000297560600002 ER PT J AU Calarco, JM AF Calarco, Jessica McCrory TI "I Need Help!" Social Class and Children's Help-Seeking in Elementary School SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE education; stratification; children; social class ID SELF-FULFILLING PROPHECY; ACADEMIC-ACHIEVEMENT; SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; STUDENTS; REPRODUCTION; INVOLVEMENT; INEQUALITY; ADVANTAGE; EDUCATION; TEACHERS AB What role do children play in education and stratification? Are they merely passive recipients of unequal opportunities that schools and parents create for them? Or do they actively shape their own opportunities? Through a longitudinal, ethnographic study of one socioeconomically diverse, public elementary school, I show that children's social-class backgrounds affect when and how they seek help in the classroom. Compared to their working-class peers, middle-class children request more help from teachers and do so using different strategies. Rather than wait for assistance, they call out or approach teachers directly, even interrupting to make requests. In doing so, middle-class children receive more help from teachers, spend less time waiting, and are better able to complete assignments. By demonstrating these skills and strategies, middle-class children create their own advantages and contribute to inequalities in the classroom. These findings have implications for theories of cultural capital, stratification, and social reproduction. C1 Univ Penn, Dept Sociol, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA. RP Calarco, JM (reprint author), Univ Penn, Dept Sociol, 3718 Locust Walk,Suite 113, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA EM jcalarco@sas.upenn.edu CR Calarco Jessica McCrory, 2011, NEGOTIATING OP UNPUB Conger RD, 2010, J MARRIAGE FAM, V72, P685, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2010.00725.x Nelson M. K., 2010, PARENTING OUT CONTRO Lareau Annette, 2010, SOCIAL CLASS DOES IT CONDRON DJ, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P685 Nelson MK, 2007, J CONTEMP ETHNOGR, V36, P281, DOI 10.1177/0891241606293137 Van Zanten Agnes, 2007, J ED POLICY, V22, P107 Buchmann C, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P515 Heckman J. J., 2006, HDB EC ED, P307 Sirin SR, 2005, REV EDUC RES, V75, P417, DOI 10.3102/00346543075003417 Rumberger RW, 2005, TEACH COLL REC, V107, P1999, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9620.2005.00583.x Domina T, 2005, SOCIOL EDUC, V78, P233 Corsaro William A., 2005, SOCIOLOGY CHILDHOOD Oakes J., 2005, KEEPING TRACK SCH ST Eccles JS, 2004, J EARLY ADOLESCENCE, V24, P63, DOI 10.1177/0272431603260919 Lareau A, 2003, THEOR SOC, V32, P567, DOI 10.1023/B:RYSO.0000004951.04408.b0 Lynch SM, 2003, DEMOGRAPHY, V40, P309, DOI 10.2307/3180803 Carter PL, 2003, SOC PROBL, V50, P136, DOI 10.1525/sp.2003.50.1.136 Lareau A., 2003, UNEQUAL CHILDHOODS C Brantlinger E., 2003, DIVIDING CLASSES MID Kahlenberg Richard D., 2003, ALL TOGETHER NOW CRE Lee Valerie E., 2002, INEQUALITY STARTING Lewis AE, 2001, AM EDUC RES J, V38, P781, DOI 10.3102/00028312038004781 Patrick H, 2001, ELEM SCHOOL J, V102, P35, DOI 10.1086/499692 Newman RS, 2000, DEV REV, V20, P350, DOI 10.1006/drev.1999.0502 Lamont M., 2000, DIGNITY WORKING MEN Lareau Annette, 2000, HOME ADVANTAGE SOCIA McRobbie Angela, 2000, FEMINISM YOUTH CULTU, P44 Lareau A, 1999, SOCIOL EDUC, V72, P37, DOI 10.2307/2673185 Duncan GJ, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P406, DOI 10.2307/2657556 Presser S, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P137, DOI 10.2307/2657486 Portes A, 1998, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V24, P1, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.24.1.1 Adler P. A., 1998, PEER POWER PREADOLES Riegle-Crumb Catherine, 1998, SOCIAL PSYCHOL ED, V2, P25 Ryan AM, 1997, J EARLY ADOLESCENCE, V17, P152, DOI 10.1177/0272431697017002003 StantonSalazar RD, 1997, HARVARD EDUC REV, V67, P1 STANTONSALAZAR RD, 1995, SOCIOL EDUC, V68, P116, DOI 10.2307/2112778 MacLeod Jay, 1995, AINT NO MAKINIT LEVE KALMIJN M, 1994, AM SOCIOL REV, V59, P257, DOI 10.2307/2096230 Miles M.B., 1994, QUALITATIVE DATA ANA Hedges LV, 1994, EDUC RES, V2, P35, DOI 10.3102/0013189X023003005 MCLEOD JD, 1993, AM SOCIOL REV, V58, P351, DOI 10.2307/2095905 Thorne B., 1993, GENDER PLAY GIRLS BO GAMORAN A, 1992, AM SOCIOL REV, V57, P812, DOI 10.2307/2096125 USEEM EL, 1992, SOCIOL EDUC, V65, P263, DOI 10.2307/2112770 MEHAN H, 1992, SOCIOL EDUC, V65, P1, DOI 10.2307/2112689 STEVENSON DL, 1991, SOCIOL EDUC, V64, P127, DOI 10.2307/2112883 Burawoy M, 1991, ETHNOGRAPHY UNBOUND Lamont Michele, 1988, SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY, P153, DOI 10.2307/202113 TEACHMAN JD, 1987, AM SOCIOL REV, V52, P548, DOI 10.2307/2095300 Good Thomas L., 1987, ED PSYCHOL, V38, P32 BAKER DP, 1986, SOCIOL EDUC, V59, P156, DOI 10.2307/2112340 McNeil L. M., 1986, CONTRADICTIONS CONTR Bourdieu P., 1985, HDB THEORY RES SOCIO, P241 GALL SN, 1985, REV RES EDUC, V12, P55, DOI 10.3102/0091732X012001055 Heath S.B., 1983, WAYS WORDS LANGUAGE DIMAGGIO P, 1982, AM SOCIOL REV, V47, P189, DOI 10.2307/2094962 EDER D, 1981, SOCIOL EDUC, V54, P151, DOI 10.2307/2112327 Metz M. H., 1978, CLASSROOMS CORRIDORS Hamilton V. Lee, 1978, THEOR PRACT, V18, P174 Bourdieu Pierre, 1977, POWER IDEOLOGY ED, P487 Willis P., 1977, LEARNING LABOR WORKI Rubin L., 1976, WORLDS PAIN LIFE WOR Bernstein BB, 1971, CLASS CODES CONTROL RIST RC, 1970, HARVARD EDUC REV, V40, P411 Kohn ML, 1963, AM J SOCIOL, V68, P471, DOI 10.1086/223403 NR 66 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD DEC PY 2011 VL 76 IS 6 BP 862 EP 882 DI 10.1177/0003122411427177 PG 21 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 855JP UT WOS:000297560600003 ER PT J AU Simons, RL Lei, MK Beach, SRH Brody, GH Philibert, RA Gibbons, FX AF Simons, Ronald L. Lei, Man Kit Beach, Steven R. H. Brody, Gene H. Philibert, Robert A. Gibbons, Frederick X. TI Social Environment, Genes, and Aggression: Evidence Supporting the Differential Susceptibility Perspective SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE aggression; differential susceptibility; gene by environment interaction (GxE) ID ADVERSE CHILDHOOD ENVIRONMENT; AFRICAN-AMERICAN YOUTHS; EXTERNALIZING BEHAVIOR; STRAIN THEORY; PERCEIVED DISCRIMINATION; PROBING INTERACTIONS; PARENTING PRACTICES; CONDUCT PROBLEMS; SELF-REGULATION; RECEPTOR GENE AB Although gene by environment studies are typically based on the assumption that some individuals possess genetic variants that enhance their vulnerability to environmental adversity, the differential susceptibility perspective posits that these individuals are simply more susceptible to environmental influence than others. An important implication of this perspective is that individuals most vulnerable to adverse social environments are the same ones who reap the most benefit from environmental support. Using longitudinal data from a sample of several hundred African Americans, we found that relatively common variants of the dopamine receptor gene and the serotonin transporter gene interact with social conditions to predict aggression in a manner consonant with the differential susceptibility perspective. When social conditions were adverse, individuals with these genetic variants manifested more aggression than other genotypes, whereas when the environment was favorable they demonstrated less aggression than other genotypes. Furthermore, we found that these genetic variants interact with environmental conditions to foster schemas and emotions consistent with the differential susceptibility perspective and that a latent construct formed by these schemas and emotions mediates the gene by environment interaction on aggression. C1 [Simons, Ronald L.] Univ Georgia, Dept Sociol, Inst Behav Res, Athens, GA 30602 USA. [Lei, Man Kit; Brody, Gene H.] Univ Georgia, Ctr Family Res, Athens, GA 30602 USA. [Philibert, Robert A.] Univ Iowa, Psychiat Genet Lab, Iowa City, IA 52242 USA. [Gibbons, Frederick X.] Dartmouth Coll, Hanover, NH 03755 USA. RP Simons, RL (reprint author), Univ Georgia, Dept Sociol, Inst Behav Res, Athens, GA 30602 USA EM rsimons@uga.edu CR Belsky J, 2011, J CHILD PSYCHOL PSYC, V52, P619, DOI 10.1111/j.1469-7610.2010.02327.x Simons RL, 2011, CRIMINOLOGY, V49, P553, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2011.00231.x Ellis BJ, 2011, DEV PSYCHOPATHOL, V23, P7, DOI 10.1017/S0954579410000611 Unnever JD, 2011, CRIMINOL JUST STUD, P1 Shanahan M. J., 2011, HDB AGING SOCIAL SCI, P135, DOI 10.1016/B978-0-12-380880-6.00010-1 Beach SRH, 2010, J FAM PSYCHOL, V24, P513, DOI 10.1037/a0020835 Stewart EA, 2010, CRIMINOLOGY, V48, P569 Muthen L. K., 2010, MPLUS 6 0 USERS GUID Hohmann S, 2009, J NEURAL TRANSM, V116, P1621, DOI 10.1007/s00702-009-0290-1 Belsky J, 2009, PSYCHOL BULL, V135, P885, DOI 10.1037/a0017376 Hayes AF, 2009, BEHAV RES METHODS, V41, P924, DOI 10.3758/BRM.41.3.924 Brody GH, 2009, CHILD DEV, V80, P645, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2009.01288.x Savolainen J, 2009, BRIT J CRIMINOL, V49, P285, DOI 10.1093/bjc/azn084 Dreber A, 2009, EVOL HUM BEHAV, V30, P85, DOI 10.1016/j.evolhumbehav.2008.11.001 Wilkinson R, 2009, SPIRIT LEVEL WHY GRE Akers R. L., 2009, CRIMINOLOGICAL THEOR Shanahan Michael, 2009, CRAFT LIFE COURSE RE, P215 Carver CS, 2008, PSYCHOL BULL, V134, P912, DOI 10.1037/a0013740 Freese J, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V114, pS1, DOI 10.1086/592208 Shanahan MJ, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V114, pS260, DOI 10.1086/592204 Guo G, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V114, pS36, DOI 10.1086/592207 Oades RD, 2008, BEHAV BRAIN FUNCT, V4, DOI 10.1186/1744-9081-4-48 Beaver KM, 2008, SOC SCI RES, V37, P736, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2007.11.003 Retz WG, 2008, PSYCHIAT RES, V158, P123, DOI 10.1016/j.psychres.2007.05.004 Bakermans-Kranenburg MJ, 2008, DEV PSYCHOL, V44, P293, DOI 10.1037/0012-1649.44.1.293 Shanahan M., 2008, BIOGRAPHY SOCIOLOGIC GUO G, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P569 Belsky J, 2007, CURR DIR PSYCHOL SCI, V16, P300, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8721.2007.00525.x Lyons-Ruth K, 2007, PSYCHIAT GENET, V17, P339 Reif A, 2007, NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOL, V32, P2375, DOI 10.1038/sj.npp.1301359 Frank MJ, 2007, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V104, P16311, DOI 10.1073/pnas.0706111104 Propper C, 2007, DEV PSYCHOBIOL, V49, P619, DOI 10.1002/dev.20249 Simons RL, 2007, CRIMINOLOGY, V45, P481, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2007.00086.x Sakai JT, 2007, PSYCHIAT GENET, V17, P207, DOI 10.1097/YPG.0b013e32809913c8 Preacher KJ, 2007, MULTIVAR BEHAV RES, V42, P185 Messner S. F., 2007, CRIME AM DREAM Bailey Christopher A., 2007, J YOUTH ADOLESCENCE, V37, P713 DeYoung CG, 2006, ARCH GEN PSYCHIAT, V63, P1410, DOI 10.1001/archpsyc.63.12.1410 Preacher KJ, 2006, J EDUC BEHAV STAT, V31, P437, DOI 10.3102/10769986031004437 Simons RL, 2006, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V47, P373 Stewart EA, 2006, J RES CRIME DELINQ, V43, P427, DOI 10.1177/0022427806292338 Brody GH, 2006, CHILD DEV, V77, P1170, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2006.00927.x Bakermans-Kranenburg MJ, 2006, DEV PSYCHOBIOL, V48, P406, DOI 10.1002/dev.20152 Dawson JF, 2006, J APPL PSYCHOL, V91, P917, DOI 10.1037/0021-9010.91.4.917 Mallinckrodt B, 2006, J COUNS PSYCHOL, V53, P372, DOI 10.1037/0022-0167.53.3.372 Caspi A, 2006, NAT REV NEUROSCI, V7, P583, DOI 10.1038/nrn1925 Ebstein RP, 2006, MOL PSYCHIATR, V11, P427, DOI 10.1038/sj.mp.4001814 Rutter M, 2006, J CHILD PSYCHOL PSYC, V47, P226, DOI 10.1111/j.1469-7610.2005.01557.x Stewart EA, 2006, JUSTICE Q, V23, P1, DOI 10.1080/07418820600552378 Kandel E, 2006, SEARCH MEMORY EMERGE Hauser M., 2006, MORAL MINDS NATURE D Agnew R., 2006, PRESSURED CRIME OVER JACOBS BA, 2006, STREET JUSTICE RETAL Verona E, 2006, BIOL PSYCHOL, V71, P33, DOI 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2005.02.001 Sampson Robert J., 2006, TAKING STOCK STATUS, V15, P149 Muller D, 2005, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V89, P852, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.89.6.852 Bradley SL, 2005, AM J MED GENET B, V136B, P58, DOI 10.1002/ajmg.b.30185 Shanahan MJ, 2005, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V60, P65 Gibbons FX, 2004, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V86, P517, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.86.4.517 Simons RL, 2003, JUSTICE Q, V20, P827, DOI 10.1080/07418820300095711 Mazerolle P, 2003, YOUTH SOC, V35, P131, DOI 10.1177/0044118X03255029 Kubrin CE, 2003, SOC PROBL, V50, P157, DOI 10.1525/sp.2003.50.2.157 Jang SJ, 2003, J QUANT CRIMINOL, V19, P79, DOI 10.1023/A:1022570729068 Laub J. H., 2003, SHARED BEGINNINGS DI Wilkinson Deanna L, 2003, GUNS VIOLENCE IDENTI Schmidt LA, 2002, PERS INDIV DIFFER, V33, P227, DOI 10.1016/S0191-8869(01)00147-7 de Castro BO, 2002, CHILD DEV, V73, P916, DOI 10.1111/1467-8624.00447 Simons RL, 2002, J MARRIAGE FAM, V64, P331, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2002.00331.x Pennisi E, 2001, SCIENCE, V293, P1064, DOI 10.1126/science.293.5532.1064 Gilligan James, 2001, PREVENTING VIOLENCE Anderson Elijah, 1999, CODE STREETS DECENCY Ellis L., 1999, CRIMINOLOGIST, V24, P4 Klonoff E. A., 1999, J BLACK PSYCHOL, V25, P231, DOI DOI 10.1177/0095798499025002006 ROBBINS TW, 1999, FUNDAMENTAL NEUROSCI, P1246 Sampson RJ, 1997, SCIENCE, V277, P918, DOI 10.1126/science.277.5328.918 Lesch KP, 1996, SCIENCE, V274, P1527, DOI 10.1126/science.274.5292.1527 Landrine H., 1996, J BLACK PSYCHOL, V22, P144, DOI 10.1177/00957984960222002 MISCHEL W, 1995, PSYCHOL REV, V102, P246, DOI 10.1037/0033-295X.102.2.246 LICHTER JB, 1993, HUM MOL GENET, V2, P767, DOI 10.1093/hmg/2.6.767 SHAFFER D, 1993, J AM ACAD CHILD PSY, V32, P643, DOI 10.1097/00004583-199305000-00023 Sampson R. J., 1993, CRIME MAKING PATHWAY BROWNE MW, 1992, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V21, P230, DOI 10.1177/0049124192021002005 Aiken L.S., 1991, MULTIPLE REGRESSION DODGE KA, 1990, SCIENCE, V250, P1678, DOI 10.1126/science.2270481 BERKOWITZ L, 1990, AM PSYCHOL, V45, P494, DOI 10.1037//0003-066X.45.4.494 BENTLER PM, 1990, PSYCHOL BULL, V107, P238, DOI 10.1037/0033-2909.107.2.238 Huizinga David, 1989, MULTIPLE PROBLEM YOU Kaufman J., 1989, CHILD MALTREATMENT T, P129, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511665707.006 SLABY RG, 1988, DEV PSYCHOL, V24, P580, DOI 10.1037//0012-1649.24.4.580 BARON RM, 1986, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V51, P1173, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.51.6.1173 DODGE KA, 1986, MINN SYM CHILD PSYCH, V18, P77 Huizinga David, 1985, EXPLAINING DELINQUEN Bourdieu P, 1984, DISTINCTION SOCIAL C Jacobs G., 1983, ADV PERSONALITY ASSE, V2, P161 Nunnally J.C, 1978, PSYCHOMETRIC THEORY Kornhauser Ruth Rosner, 1978, SOCIAL SOURCES DELIN Hirschi T, 1969, CAUSES DELINQUENCY Landor Antoinette, J SOCIAL PE IN PRESS NR 98 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD DEC PY 2011 VL 76 IS 6 BP 883 EP 912 DI 10.1177/0003122411427580 PG 30 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 855JP UT WOS:000297560600004 ER PT J AU Miech, R Pampel, F Kim, J Rogers, RG AF Miech, Richard Pampel, Fred Kim, Jinyoung Rogers, Richard G. TI The Enduring Association between Education and Mortality: The Role of Widening and Narrowing Disparities SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE mortality; socioeconomic disparities; historical trends ID UNITED-STATES; SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; HEALTH DISPARITIES; FUNDAMENTAL CAUSES; LIFE EXPECTANCY; SOCIAL STRESS; US MORTALITY; DIFFERENTIALS; INEQUALITIES; TRENDS AB This article examines how educational disparities in mortality emerge, grow, decline, and disappear across causes of death in the United States, and how these changes contribute to the enduring association between education and mortality over time. Focusing on adults age 40 to 64 years, we first examine the extent to which educational disparities in mortality persisted from 1989 to 2007. We then test the fundamental cause prediction that educational disparities in mortality persist, in part, by shifting to new health outcomes over time. We focus on the period from 1999 to 2007, when all causes of death were coded to the same classification system. Results indicate (1) substantial widening and narrowing of educational disparities in mortality across causes of death, (2) almost all causes of death with increasing mortality rates also had widening educational disparities, and (3) the total educational disparity in mortality would be about 25 percent smaller today if not for newly emergent and growing educational disparities since 1999. These results point to the theoretical and policy importance of identifying social forces that cause health disparities to widen over time. C1 [Miech, Richard] Univ Colorado, Dept Hlth & Behav Sci, Coll Liberal Arts & Sci, Denver, CO 80217 USA. [Pampel, Fred; Rogers, Richard G.] Univ Colorado Boulder, Inst Behav Sci, Populat Program, Boulder, CO USA. [Kim, Jinyoung] Korea Univ, Seoul, South Korea. RP Miech, R (reprint author), Univ Colorado, Dept Hlth & Behav Sci, Coll Liberal Arts & Sci, Campus Box 188,POB 173364, Denver, CO 80217 USA EM rmiech@gmail.com CR Miech R, 2011, ADDICTION, V106, P806, DOI 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2010.03332.x Hummer RA, 2011, INT HANDB POPUL, V2, P241, DOI 10.1007/978-90-481-9996-9_12 Yeh RW, 2010, NEW ENGL J MED, V362, P2155, DOI 10.1056/NEJMoa0908610 Xu J, 2010, NATL VITAL STAT REP, V58, P1 Pampel FC, 2010, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V36, P349, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.012809.102529 Volkow Nora D., 2010, C CAUCUS PRESCRIPTIO Eschbach Karl, 2010, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, P68 U.S. Census Bureau, 2010, TABL A 6 AG DISTR CO Clark AM, 2009, NAT REV CARDIOL, V6, P712, DOI 10.1038/nrcardio.2009.163 Chang VW, 2009, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V50, P245 Hughes ME, 2009, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V50, P344 Link BG, 2008, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V49, P367 Miech R, 2008, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V49, P352 Link BG, 2008, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V49, P72 Murray Taylor, 2008, PLOS ONE, V3, pe2181 Office of Applied Studies-Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, 2008, DHHS PUBL Warren JR, 2007, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V48, P335 Paulozzi L., 2007, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, V56, P93 Paulozzi LJ, 2006, PHARMACOEPIDEM DR S, V15, P618, DOI 10.1002/pds.1276 Singh GK, 2006, INT J EPIDEMIOL, V35, P969, DOI 10.1093/ije/dyl083 Avendano M, 2006, STROKE, V37, P1368, DOI 10.1161/01.STR.0000221702.75002.66 Miech RA, 2006, JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC, V295, P2385, DOI 10.1001/jama.295.20.2385 Thomson GE, 2006, EXAMINING HLTH DISPA Paulozzi LJ, 2006, J SAFETY RES, V37, P277, DOI 10.1016/j.jsr.2006.02.004 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 2006, OUR MISS Lutfey K, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P1326, DOI 10.1086/428914 Pampel FC, 2005, SOC SCI RES, V34, P117, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2003.12.003 Omran AR, 2005, MILBANK Q, V83, P731, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0009.2005.00398.x Goldman Dana P., 2005, CONTRIBUTIONS EC ANA, V4, P1 Phelan JC, 2004, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V45, P265 Schnittker J, 2004, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V45, P286 Palloni A, 2004, DEMOGRAPHY, V41, P385, DOI 10.1353/dem.2004.0024 Raudenbush S., 2004, HLM Crimmins E. M., 2004, CRIT PERSPECT, P310 Walker James, 2004, J PUBLIC HLTH, V94, P1037 Smith James P., 2004, POPULATION DEV REV S, V31, P108 Singh GK, 2003, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V93, P1137, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.93.7.1137 Rogers EM, 2003, DIFFUSION INNOVATION Mirowsky J., 2003, ED SOCIAL STATUS HLT Singh GK, 2003, AREA SOCIOECONOMIC V Singh GK, 2002, INT J EPIDEMIOL, V31, P600, DOI 10.1093/ije/31.3.600 Lauderdale DS, 2001, DEMOGRAPHY, V38, P551, DOI 10.2307/3088318 Crimmins EM, 2001, SOC SCI MED, V52, P1629, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(00)00273-2 Miech RA, 2001, ANN EPIDEMIOL, V11, P75, DOI 10.1016/S1047-2797(00)00079-X U.S. Census Bureau, 2001, PROF GEN DEM CHAR 20 Rogers R., 2000, LIVING DYING US BEHA National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), 1999, HLTH US 1999 HLTH AG National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), 1999, INSTR MAN 9 Dosemeci Mustafa, 1997, US DEP HLTH HUM SERV Wilkinson R., 1996, UNHEALTHY SOC AFFLIC Elo IT, 1996, SOC SCI MED, V42, P47, DOI 10.1016/0277-9536(95)00062-3 PRESTON SH, 1995, J AGING HEALTH, V7, P476, DOI 10.1177/089826439500700402 ROSS CE, 1995, AM SOCIOL REV, V60, P719, DOI 10.2307/2096319 TURNER RJ, 1995, AM SOCIOL REV, V60, P104, DOI 10.2307/2096348 THOITS PA, 1995, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, P53 LINK BG, 1995, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, P80 PAPPAS G, 1993, NEW ENGL J MED, V329, P103, DOI 10.1056/NEJM199307083290207 Spirtas Robert, 1993, MONTHLY VITAL STAT R, V42, P1 ANESHENSEL CS, 1992, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V18, P15, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.18.1.15 World Health Organization, 1992, INT STAT CLASS DIS R WILLIAMS DR, 1990, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V53, P81, DOI 10.2307/2786672 PEARLIN LI, 1989, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V30, P241, DOI 10.2307/2136956 FELDMAN JJ, 1989, AM J EPIDEMIOL, V129, P919 DULEEP HO, 1989, DEMOGRAPHY, V26, P345, DOI 10.2307/2061531 Kitagawa E., 1973, DIFFERENTIAL MORTALI NR 65 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD DEC PY 2011 VL 76 IS 6 BP 913 EP 934 DI 10.1177/0003122411411276 PG 22 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 855JP UT WOS:000297560600005 ER PT J AU Trinitapoli, J Yeatman, S AF Trinitapoli, Jenny Yeatman, Sara TI Uncertainty and Fertility in a Generalized AIDS Epidemic SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE Africa; fertility; HIV/AIDS; uncertainty ID REPRODUCTIVE DECISION-MAKING; SAMPLE SELECTION BIAS; MOTHER-TO-CHILD; RURAL MALAWI; HIV-INFECTION; SOUTH-AFRICA; NONNUMERIC RESPONSE; ECONOMIC SOCIOLOGY; FAMILY-SIZE; HIV/AIDS AB Sociologists widely acknowledge that uncertainty matters for decision making, but they rarely measure it directly. In this article, we demonstrate the importance of theorizing about, measuring, and analyzing uncertainty as experienced by individuals. We adapt a novel probabilistic solicitation technique to measure personal uncertainty about HIV status in a high HIV prevalence area of southern Malawi. Using data from 2,000 young adults (ages 15 to 25 years), we demonstrate that uncertainty about HIV status is widespread and that it expands as young adults assess their proximate and distant futures. In conceptualizing HIV status as something more than sero-status itself, we gain insight into how what individuals know they don't know influences their lives. Young people who are uncertain about their HIV status express desires to accelerate their childbearing relative to their counterparts who are certain they are uninfected. Our approach and findings show that personal uncertainty is a measurable and meaningful phenomenon that can illuminate much about individuals' aspirations and behaviors. C1 [Trinitapoli, Jenny] Penn State Univ, Dept Sociol, University Pk, PA 16802 USA. [Yeatman, Sara] Univ Colorado Denver, Denver, CO USA. RP Trinitapoli, J (reprint author), Penn State Univ, Dept Sociol, 211 Oswald Tower, University Pk, PA 16802 USA EM jennytrini@psu.edu CR Sobotka T, 2011, POPUL DEV REV, V37, P267, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4457.2011.00411.x Manglos ND, 2011, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V52, P107, DOI 10.1177/0022146510395025 Yeatman S, 2011, CULT HEALTH SEX, V13, P471, DOI 10.1080/13691058.2011.552985 Smith DJ, 2010, SOC SCI MED, V71, P345, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2010.04.006 UNAIDS, 2010, GLOB REP UNAIDS REP Yeatman Sara, 2010 Yeatman S, 2009, STUD FAMILY PLANN, V40, P261, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4465.2009.00210.x Heys J, 2009, AIDS, V23, pS37, DOI 10.1097/01.aids.0000363776.76129.fd Delavande A, 2009, DEMOGR RES, V20, P817, DOI 10.4054/DemRes.2009.20.31 Yeatman SE, 2009, AIDS BEHAV, V13, pS12, DOI 10.1007/s10461-009-9534-1 Taulo F, 2009, AIDS BEHAV, V13, pS20, DOI 10.1007/s10461-009-9547-9 Vaisey S, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P1675 Clark S, 2009, J MARRIAGE FAM, V71, P396, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2009.00607.x Tavory I, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P171 Boileau C, 2009, SEX TRANSM INFECT, V85, pI27, DOI 10.1136/sti.2008.033969 Anglewicz P, 2009, DEMOGR RES, V20, P65, DOI 10.4054/DemRes.2009.20.6 Granich RM, 2009, LANCET, V373, P48, DOI 10.1016/S0140-6736(08)61697-9 World Health Organization, 2009, WORLD HLTH STAT 2009 Chabal P, 2009, AFRICA POLITICS SUFF Burton LM, 2009, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V621, P132, DOI 10.1177/0002716208324852 Kurz Karin, 2009, Globalization, Uncertainty and Youth in Society: The Losers in a Globalizing World Tortora Robert, 2009, 14637 NAT BUR EC RES Bongaarts J, 2008, POPUL DEV REV, V34, P199, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4457.2008.00217.x Lopman B, 2008, INT J EPIDEMIOL, V37, P88, DOI 10.1093/ije/dym255 Garenne Michel, 2008, Afr J Reprod Health, V12, P64 Network ALPHA, 2008 Poulin M, 2007, SOC SCI MED, V65, P2383, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2007.05.030 White RG, 2007, EPIDEMIOL INFECT, V135, P922, DOI 10.1017/SO950268806007680 Cooper D, 2007, SOC SCI MED, V65, P274, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2007.03.019 Bongaarts J, 2007, POP STUD-J DEMOG, V61, P73, DOI 10.1080/00324720601048343 Bignami-Van Assche S, 2007, SEX TRANSM INFECT, V83, P35, DOI 10.1136/sti.2006.020545 Madise Nyovani, 2007, Afr J Reprod Health, V11, P83 Malawi Ministry of Health and National AIDS Commission, 2007, Report of a Country-Wide Survey of HIV/ AIDS Services in Malawi (for the year 2006) Von Hippel Paul T., 2007, Sociological Methodology, V37, P83 Sandberg J, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P288 Bello GA, 2006, SEX TRANSM INFECT, V82, pI9, DOI 10.1136/sti.2005.016030 Long S.J., 2006, REGRESSION MODELS CA UNAIDS, 2006, AIDS EP UPD DEC 2006 Blossfeld HP, 2006, ROUTL ADV SOCIOL, P1 Johnson-Hanks J., 2006, UNCERTAIN HONOR MODE Malawi Ministry of Health and National AIDS Commission, 2006, Report of a Country-Wide Survey of HIV/AIDS Services in Malawi (for the year 2005) Smith Daniel Jordan, 2006, Sexuality in Africa, V3, P4 Sandberg J, 2005, DEMOGRAPHY, V42, P737, DOI 10.1353/dem.2005.0035 Smith KP, 2005, SOC SCI MED, V60, P649, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2004.06.009 Lloyd C, 2005, GROWING GLOBAL CHANG Edin K., 2005, PROMISES I CAN KEEP Ashforth Adam, 2005, WITCHCRAFT VIOLENCE [National Statistical Office (NSO) ORC Macro], 2005, MAL DEM HLTH SURV 20 De Cock Kevin M, 2005, Health Hum Rights, V8, P31 Halpern J. Y, 2005, REASONING UNCERTAINT Watkins SC, 2004, POPUL DEV REV, V30, P673, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4457.2004.00037.x Johnson-Hanks J, 2004, EUR J POPUL, V20, P351, DOI 10.1007/s10680-004-4095-5 Caldwell JC, 2004, J FAM HIST, V29, P382, DOI 10.1177/0363199004267744 Glynn JR, 2003, JAIDS-J ACQ IMM DEF, V33, P526 Dequech D, 2003, AM J ECON SOCIOL, V62, P509, DOI 10.1111/1536-7150.00226 Oppenheimer VK, 2003, DEMOGRAPHY, V40, P127, DOI 10.2307/3180815 Noel-Miller Claire M., 2003, Demographic Research, V1, P319 Saba J, 2002, LANCET, V359, P1178 Kohler HP, 2002, EUR J POPUL, V18, P233, DOI 10.1023/A:1019701812709 Saidi H.Kapiga, 2002, AIDS in Africa, P498, DOI 10.1007/0-306-47817-X_31 Knight Frank. H., 2002, RISK UNCERTAINTY PRO Grieser M, 2001, J S AFR STUD, V27, P225, DOI 10.1080/03057070120049949 Weber M., 2001, PROTESTANT ETHIC SPI Rutenberg N, 2000, INT FAM PLAN PERSPEC, V26, P124, DOI 10.2307/2648301 Dequech D., 2000, E ECON J, V26, P41 Kengeya-Kayondo JF, 1999, AIDS, V13, P2295, DOI 10.1097/00002030-199911120-00012 DeQuech D, 1999, J POST KEYNESIAN EC, V21, P415 Beck Ulrich, 1999, WORLD RISK SOC Giddens Anthony, 1998, Conversations with Anthony Giddens: Making Sense of Modernity Beckert J, 1996, THEOR SOC, V25, P803, DOI 10.1007/BF00159817 Bobat R, 1996, PEDIATR INFECT DIS J, V15, P604, DOI 10.1097/00006454-199607000-00009 FRIEDMAN D, 1994, DEMOGRAPHY, V31, P375, DOI 10.2307/2061749 RILEY AP, 1993, DEMOGRAPHY, V30, P159, DOI 10.2307/2061835 CAMERER C, 1992, J RISK UNCERTAINTY, V5, P325, DOI 10.1007/BF00122575 WINSHIP C, 1992, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V18, P327, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.18.1.327 Schaeffer Nora C., 1992, Sociological Methodology, V22, P37, DOI 10.2307/270992 MORGAN SP, 1991, AM J SOCIOL, V97, P779, DOI 10.1086/229820 Giddens A., 1991, CONSEQUENCES MODERNI Egidi Massimo, 1991, J EVOLUTIONARY EC, V1, P145, DOI 10.1007/BF01224917 MILLIKEN FJ, 1987, ACAD MANAGE REV, V12, P133, DOI 10.2307/257999 SWIDLER A, 1986, AM SOCIOL REV, V51, P273, DOI 10.2307/2095521 DIMAGGIO PJ, 1983, AM SOCIOL REV, V48, P147, DOI 10.2307/2095101 CAIN M, 1983, POPUL DEV REV, V9, P688, DOI 10.2307/1973546 MORGAN SP, 1982, DEMOGRAPHY, V19, P315, DOI 10.2307/2060974 Ryder Norman B., 1980, DEMOGRAPHIC PATTERNS, P15 HECKMAN JJ, 1979, ECONOMETRICA, V47, P153, DOI 10.2307/1912352 CAIN M, 1979, POPUL DEV REV, V5, P405, DOI 10.2307/1972079 CAIN MT, 1978, POPUL DEV REV, V4, P421, DOI 10.2307/1972858 HECKMAN JJ, 1976, ANN ECON SOC MEAS, V5, P475 DUNCAN RB, 1972, ADMIN SCI QUART, V17, P313, DOI 10.2307/2392145 Thomas W.I., 1928, CHILD AM BEHAV PROBL Keynes J.M., 1921, TREATISE PROBABILITY NR 92 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD DEC PY 2011 VL 76 IS 6 BP 935 EP 954 DI 10.1177/0003122411427672 PG 20 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 855JP UT WOS:000297560600006 ER PT J AU Zheng, H Yang, Y Land, KC AF Zheng, Hui Yang, Yang Land, Kenneth C. TI Variance Function Regression in Hierarchical Age-Period-Cohort Models: Applications to the Study of Self-Reported Health SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE Hierarchical-Age-Period-Cohort-Variance-Function Regression Model; Hierarchical Age-Period-Cohort Model; Variance Function Regression Model; health disparities ID GENERALIZED LINEAR-MODELS; CROSS-SECTION SURVEYS; LIFE-COURSE PATTERNS; UNITED-STATES; RATED HEALTH; EDUCATIONAL-DIFFERENCES; SOCIOECONOMIC INEQUALITIES; SOCIAL-STRATIFICATION; GENDER-DIFFERENCES; ADULT MORTALITY AB Two long-standing research problems of interest to sociologists are sources of variations in social inequalities and differential contributions of the temporal dimensions of age, time period, and cohort to variations in social phenomena. Recently, scholars have introduced a model called Variance Function Regression for the study of the former problem, and a model called Hierarchical Age-Period-Cohort regression has been developed for the study of the latter. This article presents an integration of these two models as a means to study the evolution of social inequalities along distinct temporal dimensions. We apply the integrated model to survey data on subjective health status. We find substantial age, period, and cohort effects, as well as gender differences, not only for the conditional mean of self-rated health (i.e., between-group disparities), but also for the variance in this mean (i.e., within-group disparities)-and it is detection of age, period, and cohort variations in the latter disparities that application of the integrated model permits. Net of effects of age and individual-level covariates, in recent decades, cohort differences in conditional means of self-rated health have been less important than period differences that cut across all cohorts. By contrast, cohort differences of variances in these conditional means have dominated period differences. In particular, post-baby boom birth cohorts show significant and increasing levels of within-group disparities. These findings illustrate how the integrated model provides a powerful framework through which to identify and study the evolution of variations in social inequalities across age, period, and cohort temporal dimensions. Accordingly, this model should be broadly applicable to the study of social inequality in many different substantive contexts. C1 [Zheng, Hui] Ohio State Univ, Dept Sociol, Columbus, OH 43210 USA. [Yang, Yang] Univ N Carolina, Dept Sociol, Chapel Hill, NC USA. [Yang, Yang] Univ N Carolina, Lineberger Canc Ctr, Chapel Hill, NC USA. [Yang, Yang] Univ N Carolina, Carolina Populat Ctr, Chapel Hill, NC USA. [Land, Kenneth C.] Duke Univ, Durham, NC 27706 USA. RP Zheng, H (reprint author), Ohio State Univ, Dept Sociol, Columbus, OH 43210 USA EM zheng.64@sociology.osu.edu CR Yang Y, 2011, J GERONTOL A-BIOL, V66, P493, DOI 10.1093/gerona/glr003 Chen FN, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P126, DOI 10.1177/0003122409359165 Timmermans Stefan, 2010, HDB MED SOCIOLOGY Yang Yang, 2010, HDB AGING SOCIAL SCI, P17 Reither EN, 2009, SOC SCI MED, V69, P1439, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.08.040 Yang Y, 2009, SOC FORCES, V87, P2093 Western B, 2009, SOCIOL METHODOL, V39, P293 Alwin Duane F., 2009, AGING COGNITION RES, P9, DOI 10.1037/11882-001 National Center for Health Statistics, 2009, NAT HLTH INT SURV 19 Linda K.George, 2009, AM SOC ASS ANN M SAN Liu H, 2008, SOC SCI MED, V67, P1898, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.09.021 Western B, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P903 Jemal A, 2008, PLOS ONE, V3, DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0002181 Kulminski AM, 2008, J AM GERIATR SOC, V56, P898, DOI 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2008.01656.x Yang Y, 2008, DEMOGRAPHY, V45, P387, DOI 10.1353/dem.0.0000 Yang Y, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P204 Meara ER, 2008, HEALTH AFFAIR, V27, P350, DOI 10.1377/hlthaff.272.350 Yang Y, 2008, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V36, P297, DOI 10.1177/0049124106292360 Smith HL, 2008, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V36, P287, DOI 10.1177/0049124107310636 Fox J, 2008, APPL REGRESSION ANAL Warren JR, 2007, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V48, P335 Goesling B, 2007, SOC FORCES, V85, P1621, DOI 10.1353/sof.2007.0068 Schnittker J, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P221 Dupre ME, 2007, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V48, P1 Yang Yang, 2007, ENCY HLTH AGING, P20 Littell R.C., 2006, SAS MIXED MODELS Lee Y, 2006, J ROY STAT SOC C-APP, V55, P139, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9876.2006.00538.x Yang Y, 2006, SOCIOL METHODOL, V36, P75, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9531.2006.00175.x Yang Y, 2006, SOCIOL METHODOL, V36, P39, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9531.2006.00174.x Schoeni RF, 2005, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V95, P2065, DOI 10.2102/AJPH.2004.048744 House JS, 2005, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V60, P15 Case A, 2005, DEMOGRAPHY, V42, P189, DOI 10.1353/dem.2005.0011 Rigby RA, 2005, J ROY STAT SOC C-APP, V54, P507, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9876.2005.00510.x Demidenko E., 2004, MIXED MODELS THEORY Dannefer D, 2003, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V58, pS327 Lynch SM, 2003, DEMOGRAPHY, V40, P309, DOI 10.2307/3180803 Deaton Angus, 2003, 9821 NAT BUR EC RES Smyth GK, 2002, J COMPUT GRAPH STAT, V11, P836, DOI 10.1198/106186002871 Raudenbush S.W., 2002, HIERARCHICAL LINEAR Lauderdale DS, 2001, DEMOGRAPHY, V38, P551, DOI 10.2307/3088318 Crimmins EM, 2001, SOC SCI MED, V52, P1629, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(00)00273-2 Singh GK, 2001, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V91, P392, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.91.3.392 Kennedy BS, 2001, AM J EPIDEMIOL, V153, P232, DOI 10.1093/aje/153.3.232 Norris P., 2001, DIGITAL DIVIDE CIVIC Arunas P.Verbyla, 2001, J GRAPHICAL COMPUTAT, V11, P836 Brodie M, 2000, HEALTH AFFAIR, V19, P255, DOI 10.1377/hlthaff.19.6.255 Manor O, 2000, INT J EPIDEMIOL, V29, P149, DOI 10.1093/ije/29.1.149 Bosworth HB, 1999, MED CARE, V37, P1226, DOI 10.1097/00005650-199912000-00006 Arber S, 1999, SOC SCI MED, V48, P61, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(98)00289-5 Morris M, 1999, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V25, P623, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.25.1.623 Hummer RA, 1998, POPUL DEV REV, V24, P553, DOI 10.2307/2808154 Idler EL, 1997, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V38, P21, DOI 10.2307/2955359 Hays JC, 1996, J CLIN EPIDEMIOL, V49, P969, DOI 10.1016/0895-4356(96)00138-2 Ross CE, 1996, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V37, P104, DOI 10.2307/2137234 MacIntyre S, 1996, SOC SCI MED, V42, P617, DOI 10.1016/0277-9536(95)00335-5 PRESTON SH, 1995, J AGING HEALTH, V7, P476, DOI 10.1177/089826439500700402 HOUSE JS, 1994, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V35, P213, DOI 10.2307/2137277 SCHOENFELD DE, 1994, J GERONTOL, V49, pM109 National Center for Health Statistics, 1994, EXC DEATHS OTH MORT PAPPAS G, 1993, NEW ENGL J MED, V329, P103, DOI 10.1056/NEJM199307083290207 Lee Youngjo, 1991, APPL STOCH MODEL BUS, V7, P101 FELDMAN JJ, 1989, AM J EPIDEMIOL, V129, P919 SMYTH GK, 1989, J ROY STAT SOC B MET, V51, P47 Aitkin Murray., 1987, STATISTICS, V36, P332 Mason W. M., 1985, COHORT ANAL SOCIAL R MASON KO, 1973, AM SOCIOL REV, V38, P242, DOI 10.2307/2094398 Duncan Otis Dudley, 1966, AM OCCUPATIONAL STRU RYDER NB, 1965, AM SOCIOL REV, V30, P843, DOI 10.2307/2090964 NR 68 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD DEC PY 2011 VL 76 IS 6 BP 955 EP 983 DI 10.1177/0003122411430940 PG 29 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 855JP UT WOS:000297560600007 ER PT J AU Downer, J AF Downer, John TI "737-Cabriolet": The Limits of Knowledge and the Sociology of Inevitable Failure SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID DISASTERS AB This article looks at the fateful 1988 fuselage failure of Aloha Airlines Flight 243 to suggest and illustrate a new perspective on the sociology of technological accidents. Drawing on core insights from the sociology of scientific knowledge, it highlights, and then challenges, a fundamental principle underlying our understanding of technological risk: a realist epistemology that tacitly assumes that technological knowledge is objectively knowable and that "failures" always connote "errors" that are, in principle, foreseeable. From here, it suggests a new conceptual tool by proposing a novel category of man-made calamity: the "epistemic accident," grounded in a constructivist understanding of knowledge. It concludes by exploring the implications of epistemic accidents and a constructivist approach to failure, sketching their relationship to broader issues concerning technology and society, and reexamining conventional ideas about technology, accountability, and governance. C1 Stanford Univ, Ctr Int Secur & Cooperat, Stanford, CA 94305 USA. RP Downer, J (reprint author), Stanford Univ, Ctr Int Secur & Cooperat, Stanford, CA 94305 USA EM jrd22@cornell.edu CR Downer John, 2011, Accounting, Organizations and Society, V36 Downer John, 2009, Discussion paper no. 53 Downer John, 2009, Discussion paper no. 54 Marks Paul, 2009, New Scientist, P20 Maksel Rebecca, 2008, Air and Space Magazine Hackett E, 2008, HDB SCI TECHNOLOGY S Downer J, 2007, SOC STUD SCI, V37, P7, DOI 10.1177/0306312706064235 Power M., 2007, ORG UNCERTAINTY DESI Petroski H., 2006, SUCCESS FAILURE PARA NTSB (National Transportation Safety Board), 2006, Safety report NTSB/SR-06/02. PB2006-917003. Notation 7752A [Anonymous], 2005, Air Safety Week Garrison Peter, 2005, Flying Vaughan D., 2005, ORG ENCOUNTERS RISK, P33 Hutter Bridget, 2005, ORG ENCOUNTERS RISK Jasanoff Sheila, 2005, Organizational Encounters with Risk, P207 Research and Innovative Technology Administration, 2005, Volpe Journal Cobb Rodger, 2003, PLANE TRUTH AIRLINE Vaughan Diane, 2003, V1, P195 Kusch Martin, 2002, KNOWLEDGE AGREEMENT Beamish Thomas, 2002, SILENT SPILL ORG IND Hopkins A, 2001, J CONTINGENCIES CRIS, V9, P65, DOI 10.1111/1468-5973.00155 Galison P, 2000, Atmospheric Flight in the Twentieth Century, P3 Snook S, 2000, FRIENDLY FIRE Hopkins A, 1999, SAFETY SCI, V32, P93 Perrow C., 1999, NORMAL ACCIDENTS LIV Scott James C, 1998, SEEING STATE CERTAIN Collins H.M., 1998, GOLEM LARGE WHAT YOU MacKenzie Donald, 1998, Exploring Expertise: Issues and Perspectives, P325 Langewiesche William, 1998, INSIDE SKY MEDITATIO Weick K. E, 1998, Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management, V6, P72, DOI 10.1111/1468-5973.00072 Power M., 1997, AUDIT SOC RITUALS VE Durkheim E., 1997, SUICIDE U.S. Congress, 1997, Hearing before the Subcommittee on Aviation, Committee onTransportation and Infrastructure, House of Representatives Latour B., 1996, ARAMIS LOVE TECHNOLO Vaughan D., 1996, CHALLENGER LAUNCH DE DORNER D, 1996, LOGIC FAILURE RECOGN MacKenzie D., 1996, KNOWING MACHINES ESS Faith Nicholas, 1996, Black Box Porter T. M., 1995, TRUST NUMBERS PURSUI Perrow C., 1994, J CONTINGENCIES CRIS, V2, P212, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-5973.1994.tb00046.x Hainge Greg, 2002, HIGHER SUPERSTITION, V16.3, P285 Petroski H., 1994, DESIGN PARADIGMS CAS La Porte T. R., 1994, J CONTINGENCIES CRIS, V2, P207, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-5973.1994.tb00045.x Jasanoff Sheila, 1994, LEARNING DISASTER RI, P1994 PINCH T, 1993, SCI TECHNOL HUM VAL, V18, P25, DOI 10.1177/016224399301800103 Roberts K. H., 1993, NEW CHALLENGES UNDER Collins H. M., 1993, GOLEM WHAT EVERYONE Sagan S, 1993, LIMITS SAFETY Collins H., 1992, CHANGING ORDER REPLI Aubury Martin, 1992, BASI Journal Petroski Henry, 1992, ENGINEER IS HUMAN RO LaPorte T.R., 1991, J PUBL ADM RES THEOR, V1, P19 Feeler Robert A, 1991, Aviation Mechanics Bulletin, P1 Weingart Peter, 1991, SOCIAL RESPONSES LAR, P5 Pinch Trevor, 1991, Social Responses to Large Technical Systems: Control or Anticipation, P143 Reason J, 1990, HUMAN ERROR MacKenzie Donald, 1990, INVENTING ACCURACY H Clarke L, 1989, Acceptable Risk? Rochlin G, 1989, Industrial Crisis Quarterly, V3, P614 Cushman John, 1989, New York Times Hoffer W, 1989, Popular Mechanics, P67 NTSB (National Transportation Safety Board), 1989, Report no. NTSB/AAR-89/03, Acc. no. PB89-91C404 WYNNE B, 1988, SOC STUD SCI, V18, P147, DOI 10.1177/030631288018001006 WEICK KE, 1987, CALIF MANAGE REV, V29, P112 Latour B, 1987, SCI ACTION FOLLOW SC Bijker W.E., 1987, SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION Rochlin G. I., 1987, NAVAL WAR COLLEGE RE, P76 DAVID PA, 1985, AM ECON REV, V75, P332 Collins H.M, 1985, CHANGING ORDER Perrow C., 1984, NORMAL ACCIDENTS LIV GEPHART RP, 1984, J MANAGE, V10, P205, DOI 10.1177/014920638401000205 Pinch T. J., 1984, SOC STUD SCI, V14, P339 La Porte T, 1982, Accident at Three Mile Island, P185 Perrow Charles, 1982, Accident at Three Mile Island: The Human Dimensions, P173 National Academy of Sciences, 1980, Committee on FAA Airworthiness Certification Procedures Assembly of Engineering Latour B, 1979, LAB LIFE SOCIAL CONS Turner B., 1978, MAN MADE DISASTERS TURNER BA, 1976, ADMIN SCI QUART, V21, P378, DOI 10.2307/2391850 Bloor D, 1976, KNOWLEDGE SOCIAL IMA Quinn W. V. O, 1975, ERKENNTNIS, V9, P313 Barnes B., 1974, SCI KNOWLEDGE SOCIOL Merton R.K, 1973, SOCIOLOGY SCI THEORE Kuhn T., 1962, STRUCTURE SCI REVOLU NR 83 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD NOV PY 2011 VL 117 IS 3 BP 725 EP 762 DI 10.1086/662383 PG 38 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 855NZ UT WOS:000297572700001 ER PT J AU Torche, F AF Torche, Florencia TI Is a College Degree Still the Great Equalizer? Intergenerational Mobility across Levels of Schooling in the United States SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID HIGHER-EDUCATION; MAINTAINED INEQUALITY; CROSS-CLASSIFICATIONS; SOCIAL-MOBILITY; WAGE INEQUALITY; SEX SEGREGATION; LABOR-MARKET; EARNINGS; GENDER; SELECTIVITY AB A quarter century ago, an important finding in stratification research showed that the intergenerational occupational association was much weaker among college graduates than among those with lower levels of education. This article provides a comprehensive assessment of the "meritocratic power" of a college degree. Drawing on five longitudinal data sets, the author analyzes intergenerational mobility in terms of class, occupational status, earnings, and household income for men and women. Findings indicate that the intergenerational association is strong among those with low educational attainment; it weakens or disappears among bachelor's degree holders but reemerges among those with advanced degrees, leading to a U-shaped pattern of parental influence. Educational and labor market factors explain these differences in mobility: parental resources influence college selectivity, field of study, and earnings more strongly for advanced-degree holders than for those with a bachelor's degree alone. C1 NYU, Dept Sociol, New York, NY 10012 USA. RP Torche, F (reprint author), NYU, Dept Sociol, 295 Lafayette St,4129, New York, NY 10012 USA EM florencia.torche@nyu.edu CR Alon S, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P731 Autor DH, 2008, REV ECON STAT, V90, P300, DOI 10.1162/rest.90.2.300 Kim C, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P129 Kennedy Peter, 2008, GUIDE ECONOMETRICS Goldin C., 2008, RACE ED TECHNOLOGY Stevens ML, 2008, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V34, P127, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.34.040507.134737 Gerber TP, 2008, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V34, P299, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.34.040507.134604 Lareau Annette, 2008, SOCIAL CLASS DOES IT Jackson M, 2007, BRIT J SOCIOL, V58, P367, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-4446.2007.00156.x Grodsky E, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V112, P1662, DOI 10.1086/512707 Breen R, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V112, P1775, DOI 10.1086/508790 Baron JN, 2007, WORK OCCUPATION, V34, P35, DOI 10.1177/0730888406296945 Tang Zun, 2007, RES SOCIAL STRATIFIC, V25, P273, DOI 10.1016/j.rssm.2007.08.003 Weeden KA, 2007, AM BEHAV SCI, V50, P702, DOI 10.1177/0002764206295015 Breen Richard, 2007, ORIGIN DESTINATION Goldthorpe John, 2007, SOCIOLOGY, V2 Attawell Paul, 2007, PASSING TORCH Shauman KA, 2006, SOC SCI RES, V35, P577, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2004.12.001 Haider S, 2006, AM ECON REV, V96, P1308, DOI 10.1257/aer.96.4.1308 Brand JE, 2006, SOC SCI RES, V35, P749, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2005.06.006 Beller E, 2006, FUTURE CHILD, V16, P19, DOI 10.1353/foc.2006.0012 Haveman R, 2006, FUTURE CHILD, V16, P125, DOI 10.1353/foc.2006.0015 Buchmann C, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P515 Ermisch J, 2006, ECON J, V116, P659, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0297.2006.01105.x Diprete TA, 2006, DEMOGRAPHY, V43, P1, DOI 10.1353/dem.2006.0003 Katz Lawrence F., 2006, AM EC REV PAPERS P, V96, P198 Mullen Ann, 2006, J HIGH EDUC, V77, P488 Weeden Kim, 2006, MOBILITY INEQUALITY Mayer SE, 2005, J HUM RESOUR, V40, P169 Mazumder B, 2005, REV ECON STAT, V87, P235, DOI 10.1162/0034653053970249 Zelnick Robert, 2008, EQUITY EXCELLENCE AM Wright Erik Olin, 2005, APPROACHES CLASS ANA Carneiro Pedro, 2005, INEQUALITY AM WHAT R Zhang Liang, 2005, HIGH EDUC, V46, P437 Weeden Kim, 2005, STATA ALGORITHM BACK College Board, 2005, TRENDS HIGH ED SER Astin AW, 2004, REV HIGH EDUC, V27, P321, DOI 10.1353/rhe.2004.0001 Petersen T, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P852, DOI 10.1086/378536 Vallet L.-A., 2004, SOCIAL MOBILITY EURO Neckerman Kathryn M., 2004, SOCIAL INEQUALITY Thomas SL, 2003, RES HIGH EDUC, V44, P263, DOI 10.1023/A:1023058330965 Mullen AL, 2003, SOCIOL EDUC, V76, P143, DOI 10.2307/3090274 Treiman Donald, 2003, ADV CROSS NATL COMPA Goldin Claudia, 2003, AGENDA NATION, P17 Hurtado Sylvia, 2003, PUBLIC RES U SERVING Elvira MM, 2002, ORGAN SCI, V13, P601, DOI 10.1287/orsc.13.6.601.499 Dale SB, 2002, Q J ECON, V117, P1491, DOI 10.1162/003355302320935089 DiPrete TA, 2002, AM J SOCIOL, V108, P267, DOI 10.1086/344811 Karen D, 2002, SOCIOL EDUC, V75, P191, DOI 10.2307/3090265 Chadwick L, 2002, AM ECON REV, V92, P335, DOI 10.1257/000282802760015766 Padavic I., 2002, WOMEN MEN WORK Newburger Eric, 2002, CURRENT POPULATION R, P1 Lucas SR, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P1642, DOI 10.1086/321300 Monks J, 2000, ECON EDUC REV, V19, P279, DOI 10.1016/S0272-7757(99)00023-0 Reskin BF, 2000, CONTEMP SOCIOL, V29, P319, DOI 10.2307/2654387 Altonji JG, 2000, J HUM RESOUR, V35, P221, DOI 10.2307/146324 Bielby WT, 2000, CONTEMP SOCIOL, V29, P120, DOI 10.2307/2654937 Danziger Sheldon, 2000, SECURING FUTURE INVE, P283 Hallinan Maureen, 2000, HDB SOCIOLOGY ED, P499 Bjorklund Anders, 2000, NORDIC J POLITICAL E, V26, P3 Day JenniferC, 2000, 43 US CENS BUR POP D Brewer DJ, 1999, J HUM RESOUR, V34, P104, DOI 10.2307/146304 Ross CE, 1999, DEMOGRAPHY, V36, P445, DOI 10.2307/2648083 Weakliem DL, 1999, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V27, P359, DOI 10.1177/0049124199027003002 Cook C, 1998, SOCIOL REV, V46, P314, DOI 10.1111/1467-954X.00121 Tilly C, 1998, DURABLE INEQUALITY Hauser Robert, 1998, INTERGENERATIONAL EC Breen R, 1997, RATION SOC, V9, P275, DOI 10.1177/104346397009003002 Jaeger DA, 1997, J BUS ECON STAT, V15, P300, DOI 10.2307/1392334 Loury LD, 1997, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V50, P580, DOI 10.2307/2525263 Davies S, 1997, SOC FORCES, V75, P1417, DOI 10.2307/2580677 Warren John Robert, 1997, SOCIOLOGICAL METHODO, V27 Park JH, 1996, ECON LETT, V50, P425, DOI 10.1016/0165-1765(95)00778-4 BREWER DJ, 1996, RES LABOR E, V15, P239 Breen Richard, 1996, SOCIAL CLASS SOCIAL PETERSEN T, 1995, AM J SOCIOL, V101, P329, DOI 10.1086/230727 LOURY LD, 1995, J LABOR ECON, V13, P289, DOI 10.1086/298375 GROGGER J, 1995, J HUM RESOUR, V30, P280, DOI 10.2307/146120 McGarry K, 1995, J HUM RESOUR, V30, pS184, DOI 10.2307/146283 BREEN R, 1994, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V23, P147, DOI 10.1177/0049124194023002001 NAKAO K, 1994, SOCIOL METHODOL, V24, P1, DOI 10.2307/270978 STOLZENBERG RM, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V99, P1042, DOI 10.1086/230371 Tomaskovic-Devey D, 1993, GENDER RACIAL INEQUA RAFTERY AE, 1993, SOCIOL EDUC, V66, P41, DOI 10.2307/2112784 Shavit Y., 1993, PERSISTENT INEQUALIT Raftery Adrian, 1993, PERSISTENT INEQUALIT, P25 PERSELL CH, 1992, SOCIOL EDUC, V65, P208, DOI 10.2307/2112809 ZIMMERMAN DJ, 1992, AM ECON REV, V82, P409 XIE Y, 1992, AM SOCIOL REV, V57, P380, DOI 10.2307/2096242 HAUSER RM, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V97, P1689, DOI 10.1086/229944 England Paula, 1992, COMPARABLE WORTH THE Solon, 1992, AM ECON REV, V82, P393 Erikson R., 1992, CONSTANT FLUX STUDY Raudenbush S. W., 1992, HIERARCHICAL LINEAR MARE RD, 1991, AM SOCIOL REV, V56, P15, DOI 10.2307/2095670 GOLDBERGER AS, 1989, AM ECON REV, V79, P504 HOUT M, 1988, AM J SOCIOL, V93, P1358, DOI 10.1086/228904 Berger Mark, 1988, CHOICE, V41, P418 KARABEL J, 1987, SOCIOL INQ, V57, P323, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.1987.tb00243.x Hout Michael, 1984, AM J SOCIOL, V89, P1397 Treiman D. J., 1981, WOMEN WORK WAGES EQU Featherman David, 1981, SOC SCI RES, V10, P264 MARE RD, 1980, J AM STAT ASSOC, V75, P295, DOI 10.2307/2287448 Goldthorpe J. H., 1980, SOCIAL MOBILITY CLAS GOODMAN LA, 1979, J AM STAT ASSOC, V74, P537, DOI 10.2307/2286971 Featherman D. L., 1978, OPPORTUNITY CHANGE HAUSER RM, 1976, SOCIOL EDUC, V49, P99, DOI 10.2307/2112516 Blau P., 1967, AM OCCUPATIONAL STRU Reiss Albert, 1961, OCCUPATIONS SOCIAL S NR 109 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD NOV PY 2011 VL 117 IS 3 BP 763 EP 807 DI 10.1086/661904 PG 45 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 855NZ UT WOS:000297572700002 ER PT J AU Breen, R Salazar, L AF Breen, Richard Salazar, Leire TI Educational Assortative Mating and Earnings Inequality in the United States SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID INCOME INEQUALITY; FAMILY-STRUCTURE; WIVES EARNINGS; CHILDREN; IMPACT AB This article investigates how changes in educational assortative mating affected the growth in earnings inequality among households in the United States between the late 1970s and early 2000s. The authors find that these changes had a small, negative effect on inequality: there would have been more inequality in earnings in the early 2000s if educational assortative mating patterns had remained as they were in the 1970s. Given the educational distribution of men and women in the United States, educational assortative mating can have only a weak impact on inequality, and educational sorting among partners is a poor proxy for sorting on earnings. C1 [Breen, Richard] Yale Univ, Dept Sociol, Ctr Res Inequal & Life Course, New Haven, CT 06520 USA. [Salazar, Leire] Univ Nacl Educ Distancia, Dept Sociol Social Stratificat 2, Madrid, Spain. RP Breen, R (reprint author), Yale Univ, Dept Sociol, Ctr Res Inequal & Life Course, POB 208265, New Haven, CT 06520 USA EM richard.breen@yale.edu CR Schwartz CR, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P1524 Blossfeld Hans-Peter, 2009, Annual Review of Sociology, V35, P513 Reed D., 2009, Rising Family Income Inequality: The Importance of Sorting Western B, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P903 McLanahan S, 2008, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V34, P257, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.34.040507.134549 Mare RD, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P542 Martin MA, 2006, DEMOGRAPHY, V43, P421, DOI 10.1353/dem.2006.0025 Paul A. M, 2006, New York Times Schwartz CR, 2005, DEMOGRAPHY, V42, P621, DOI 10.1353/dem.2005.0036 Saez E, 2005, J EUR ECON ASSOC, V3, P402, DOI 10.1162/1542476054472874 Ruggles Steven, 2004, INTEGRATED PUBLIC US Amin S, 2004, Journal of Asian Studies, V15, P49, DOI 10.1016/j.asieco.2003.12.002 Ellwood David T, 2004, Working paper no. RWP04-008 Blossfeld H.-P., 2003, WHO MARRIES WHOM ED Fernandez R, 2001, Q J ECON, V116, P1305, DOI 10.1162/003355301753265589 Casper LM, 2000, DEMOGRAPHY, V37, P237, DOI 10.2307/2648125 Bjorklund Anders, 2000, NORDIC J POLITICAL E, V26, P3 Cancian M, 1999, DEMOGRAPHY, V36, P173, DOI 10.2307/2648106 Burtless G, 1999, EUR ECON REV, V43, P853, DOI 10.1016/S0014-2921(98)00099-3 Cancian M., 1998, Journal of Income Distribution, V8, P45, DOI 10.1016/S0926-6437(99)80003-1 Callan T, 1998 Gottschalk P, 1997, J ECON LIT, V35, P633 Kremer M, 1997, Q J ECON, V112, P115, DOI 10.1162/003355397555145 Lerman RI, 1996, ECONOMICA, V63, pS119, DOI 10.2307/2554812 Harkness S, 1996, New Inequalities: The Changing Distribution of Income and Wealth in the United Kingdom, P158, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511521935.007 KAROLY LA, 1995, DEMOGRAPHY, V32, P379, DOI 10.2307/2061687 Machin S, 1994 XIE Y, 1992, AM SOCIOL REV, V57, P380, DOI 10.2307/2096242 BJORKLUND A, 1992, ACTA SOCIOL, V35, P299 GRONAU R, 1982, POPUL DEV REV, V8, P119, DOI 10.2307/2808109 BOURGUIGNON F, 1979, ECONOMETRICA, V47, P901, DOI 10.2307/1914138 Deming WE, 1940, ANN MATH STAT, V11, P427, DOI 10.1214/aoms/1177731829 NR 32 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD NOV PY 2011 VL 117 IS 3 BP 808 EP 843 DI 10.1086/661778 PG 36 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 855NZ UT WOS:000297572700003 ER PT J AU Bailey, AK Snedker, KA AF Bailey, Amy Kate Snedker, Karen A. TI Practicing What They Preach? Lynching and Religion in the American South, 1890-1929 SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID REPRESSIVE JUSTICE; LOUISIANA; CONFLICT; POPULISM; GEORGIA; THREAT AB This project employs a moral solidarity framework to explore the relationship between organized religion and lynching in the American South. The authors ask whether a county's religious composition affected its rate of lynching, net of demographic and economic controls. The authors find evidence for the solidarity thesis, using three religious metrics. First, their findings show that counties with greater religious diversity experienced more lynching, supporting the notion that a pluralistic religious marketplace with competing religious denominations weakened the bonds of a cohesive moral community and might have enhanced white racial solidarity. Second, counties in which a larger share of the black population worshipped in churches controlled by blacks experienced higher levels of racial violence, indicating a threat to intergroup racially based solidarity. Finally, the authors find a lower incidence of lynching in counties where a larger share of church members belonged to racially mixed denominations, suggesting that cross-racial solidarity served to reduce racial violence. C1 [Bailey, Amy Kate] Utah State Univ, Dept Sociol Social Work & Anthropol, Logan, UT 84322 USA. [Snedker, Karen A.] Seattle Pacific Univ, Seattle, WA USA. RP Bailey, AK (reprint author), Utah State Univ, Dept Sociol Social Work & Anthropol, 0730 Old Main Hill, Logan, UT 84322 USA EM amy.bailey@usu.edu CR Bailey AK, 2011, AM SOCIOL REV, V76, P412, DOI 10.1177/0003122411407736 Evans I., 2009, CULTURES VIOLENCE LY GODOY A.S., 2006, POPULAR INJUSTICE VI Clubb Jerome M, 2006, ICPSR08611V1 INT CON, DOI [10.3886/ ICPSR08611, DOI 10.3886/ICPSR08611] Jacobs D, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P656 Messner SE, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P633 Finke Roger, 2005, CHURCHING AM 1776 20 Gregory JN, 2005, SOUTHERN DIASPORA: HOW THE GREAT MIGRATIONS OF BLACK AND WHITE SOUTHERNERS TRANSFORMED AMERICA, P1 Bailey Fred Arthur, 2005, WHICH GOD HATH PUT A, P11 Feldman Glenn, 2005, POLITICS RELIG WHITE Collins Randall, 2004, INTERACTION RITUAL C Pfeifer Michael, 2004, ROUGH JUSTICE LYNCHI Schweiger Beth Barton, 2004, RELIG AM S PROTESTAN Schweiger Beth Barton, 2004, RELIG AM S PROTESTAN, P31 Berends Kurt O., 2004, RELIG AM S PROTESTAN, P99 Matthews Donald G, 2004, RELIG AM S PROTESTAN, P153 Harvey Paul, 2004, RELIG AM S PROTESTAN, P283 Beck E. M, 2004, CONFIRMED INVENTORY Smith Christian, 2003, SECULAR REVOLUTION P, P1 Young MP, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P660, DOI 10.2307/3088911 Voas D, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P212, DOI 10.2307/3088893 Leonard Stephen J, 2002, LYNCHING COLORADO 18 Durkheim E., 2001, ELEMENTARY FORMS REL Stark Rodney, 2001, ONE TRUE GOD HIST CO Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research, 2001, ICPSR00003V1, DOI [10.3886/ ICPSR00003, DOI 10.3886/ICPSR00003] Oliver William, 2001, J HUMAN BEHAV SOCIAL, V4, P1, DOI 10.1300/J137v04n02_01 Smith Christian, 2000, DIVIDED FAITH EVANGE Perloff RM, 2000, J BLACK STUD, V30, P315 Allen James, 2000, SANCTUARY LYNCHING P Stark R., 2000, ACTS FAITH Kunovich RM, 1999, SOC FORCES, V78, P643, DOI 10.2307/3005570 Hechter Michael, 1999, INTERNAL COLONIALISM Wasserman Ira M, 1998, MICHIGAN SOCIOLOGICA, V12, P68 Long J. Scott, 1997, REGRESSION MODELS CA Brundage F.W., 1997, SENTENCE DEATH LYNCH Senechal de la Roche Roberta, 1997, SENTENCE DEATH LYNCH, P48 Stark Rodney, 1997, RELIG DEVIANCE SOCIA Beck E. M, 1997, SENTENCE DEATH LYNCH, P132 Finnegan Terence, 1997, SENTENCE DEATH LYNCH, P189 Tolnay Stewart E., 1995, FESTIVAL VIOLENCE AN Horan Patrick M, 1995, COUNTY LONGITUDINAL Ayers Edward L, 1995, SO CROSSING HIST AM HODSON R, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V99, P1534, DOI 10.1086/230453 WILLIAMS RM, 1994, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V20, P49, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.20.1.49 Hall Jacquelyn Dowd, 1993, REVOLT CHIVALRY JD A Brundage Fitzhugh, 1993, LYNCHING NEW S GEORG Snay Mitchell, 1993, GOSPEL DISUNION RELI SOULE SA, 1992, SOC FORCES, V71, P431, DOI 10.2307/2580018 Finke Roger, 1992, CHURCHING AM 1776 19 Montgomery William E., 1992, THEIR OWN VINE FIG T OLZAK S, 1991, AM SOCIOL REV, V56, P458, DOI 10.2307/2096268 OLZAK S, 1990, SOC FORCES, V69, P395, DOI 10.2307/2579665 BECK EM, 1990, AM SOCIOL REV, V55, P526, DOI 10.2307/2095805 MASSEY JL, 1989, SOC FORCES, V68, P458, DOI 10.2307/2579256 Thomas G, 1989, REVIVALISM CULTURAL Finke Roger, 1989, RELIGION, V28, P45 Anderson James D., 1988, ED BLACKS S 1860 193 Dollard John, 1937, CASTE CLASS SO TOWN Stark Rodney, 1987, THEORY RELIG Christiano Kevin J, 1987, RELIG DIVERSITY SOCI Wheeler Edward L, 1986, UPLIFTING RACE BLACK Durkheim Emile, 1984, DIVISION LABOR SOC CORZINE J, 1983, SOC FORCES, V61, P774, DOI 10.2307/2578134 STARK R, 1983, J RES CRIME DELINQ, V20, P4, DOI 10.1177/002242788302000102 James R.McGovern, 1982, ANATOMY LYNCHING KIL STARK R, 1981, J SCI STUD RELIG, V20, P360, DOI 10.2307/1386184 Wilson Charles Reagan, 1980, BAPTIZED BLOOD RELIG Samuel Jr. S.Hill, 1980, S N AM RELIG POPE W, 1977, AM SOCIOL REV, V42, P363, DOI 10.2307/2094612 INVERARITY JM, 1976, AM SOCIOL REV, V41, P262, DOI 10.2307/2094473 Grant Donald L, 1975, ANTILYNCHING MOVEMEN Samuel Jr. S.Hill, 1972, RELIG SOLID S Farish Hunter Dickinson, 1969, CIRCUIT RIDER DISMOU Raper Arthur F, 1933, TRAGEDY LYNCHING Erikson Kai T., 1966, WAYWARD PURITANS STU Frazier E. Franklin, 1964, NEGRO CHURCH AM Spain Rufus B, 1961, EASE ZION SOCIAL HIS Miller Robert Moats, 1957, HISTORY, V42, P118 Herfindahl O., 1950, THESIS COLUMBIA U Hovland CI, 1940, J PSYCHOL, V9, P301 Ames JD, 1938, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V2, P77, DOI 10.1086/265154 Nicholson Joseph, 1933, NEGROS CHURCH U.S. Bureau of the Census, 1916, CENS REL BOD 2 U.S. Bureau of the Census, 1906, CENS REL BOD 1 U.S. Bureau of the Census, 1894, STAT CHURCH 11 DEC R NR 85 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD NOV PY 2011 VL 117 IS 3 BP 844 EP 887 DI 10.1086/661985 PG 44 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 855NZ UT WOS:000297572700004 ER PT J AU Edelman, LB Eliason, SR Mellema, V Krieger, LH Albiston, CR AF Edelman, Lauren B. Eliason, Scott R. Mellema, Virginia Krieger, Linda H. Albiston, Catherine R. TI When Organizations Rule: Judicial Deference to Institutionalized Employment Structures SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID US-SUPREME-COURT; CIVIL-RIGHTS LAW; LOOSELY COUPLED SYSTEMS; AMICUS-CURIAE BRIEF; UNITED-STATES; ADMINISTRATIVE STATE; LEGAL ENVIRONMENTS; DISPUTE RESOLUTION; DECISION-MAKING; FEDERAL-COURTS AB This article offers a theoretical and empirical analysis of legal endogeneity-a powerful process through which institutionalized organizational structures influence judicial conceptions of compliance with antidiscrimination law. It finds that organizational structures (e.g., grievance and evaluation procedures, antiharassment policies) become symbolic indicators of rational governance and compliance with antidiscrimination laws, first within organizations, but eventually in the judicial realm as well. Lawyers and judges tend to infer nondiscrimination from the mere presence of those structures. Judges increasingly defer to organizational structures in their opinions, ultimately inferring nondiscrimination from their presence. Legal endogeneity theory is tested by analyzing a random sample of 1,024 federal employment discrimination opinions (1965-99) and is found to have increased over time. Judicial deference is most likely when plaintiffs lack clout and when the legal theories require judges to rule on unobservable organizational attributes. The authors argue that legal endogeneity weakens the impact of law when organizational structures are viewed as indicators of legal compliance even in the face of discriminatory actions. C1 [Edelman, Lauren B.] Univ Calif Berkeley, Ctr Study Law & Soc, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA. [Eliason, Scott R.] Univ Arizona, Inst BIO5, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA. [Eliason, Scott R.] Univ Arizona, Stat Grad Program, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA. [Mellema, Virginia] US Equal Employment Opportun Commiss, Washington, DC USA. [Krieger, Linda H.] Univ Hawaii, William S Richardson Sch Law, Ulu Lehua Scholars Program, Manoa, HI USA. [Albiston, Catherine R.] Univ Calif Berkeley, Jurisprudence & Social Policy Program, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA. [Albiston, Catherine R.] Univ Calif Berkeley, Berkeley Law Sch, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA. RP Edelman, LB (reprint author), Univ Calif Berkeley, Ctr Study Law & Soc, 2240 Piedmt Ave, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA EM ledelman@law.berkeley.edu CR Nielsen LB, 2010, J EMPIR LEGAL STUD, V7, P175, DOI 10.1111/j.1740-1461.2010.01175.x Shamir R, 2010, ANNU REV LAW SOC SCI, V6, P531, DOI 10.1146/annurev-lawsocsci-102209-153000 Edelman LB, 2010, ANNU REV LAW SOC SCI, V6, P653, DOI 10.1146/annurev-lawsocsci-102209-152842 Verbeke Geert, 2010, Models for Discrete Longitudinal Data Talesh SA, 2009, LAW SOC REV, V43, P527 Liu S, 2009, LAW SOCIAL INQUIRY, V34, P911 Dobbin F, 2009, INVENTING EQUAL OPPORTUNITY, P1 Halliday TC, 2009, ANNU REV LAW SOC SCI, V5, P263, DOI 10.1146/annurev.lawsocsci.093008.131606 Morrill Calvin, 2009, I CHANGE INTERSTITIA Scott WR, 2008, THEOR SOC, V37, P427, DOI 10.1007/s11186-008-9067-z Hirsh CE, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P1394, DOI 10.1086/525510 Guthrie C, 2007, CORNELL LAW REV, V93, P1 Scott W. R., 2007, ORG ORG RATIONAL NAT Halliday TC, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V112, P1135, DOI 10.1086/507855 Stryker R, 2007, ANNU REV LAW SOC SCI, V3, P69, DOI 10.1146/annurev.lawsocsci.3.081806.112728 Edelman LaurenB, 2007, Private Equity, Corporate Governance, and the Dynamics of Capital Market Regulation O'Brien Justin, 2007, Redesigning Financial Regulation: The Politics of Enforcement Provine Marie, 2007 Bamberger KA, 2006, DUKE LAW J, V56, P377 Kalev A, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P589 Greenwald AG, 2006, CALIF LAW REV, V94, P945 Krieger LH, 2006, CALIF LAW REV, V94, P997 Kamieniecki Sheldon, 2006, CORPORATE AM ENV POL Sawicki Andres, 2006, JUDGES POLITICAL EMP Clemens Elizabeth S., 2006, I CHANGE Bix Brian, 2006, JURISPRUDENCE THEORY Grattet R, 2005, LAW SOC REV, V39, P893, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-5893.2005.00248.x Albiston CR, 2005, LAW SOC REV, V39, P11, DOI 10.1111/j.0023-9216.2005.00076.x Marshall AM, 2005, LAW SOC REV, V39, P83, DOI 10.1111/j.0023-9216.2005.00078.x Nielsen Laura Beth, 2005, WISC LAW REV, V2005, P663 Edelman Lauren B., 2005, HDB EMPLOYMENT DISCR Pope Jeremy, 1994, FLA ST U L REV, V20, P1468 Heinz John P., 2005, URBAN LAWYERS NEW SO Edelman LB, 2005, HANDBOOK OF ECONOMIC SOCIOLOGY, SECOND EDITION, P527 Larson EW, 2004, LAW SOC REV, V38, P737, DOI 10.1111/j.0023-9216.2004.00065.x Lobel O, 2004, MINN LAW REV, V89, P342 Collins PM, 2004, LAW SOC REV, V38, P807, DOI 10.1111/j.0023-9216.2004.00067.x Pedriana N, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P709, DOI 10.1086/422588 Hansford TG, 2004, POLIT RES QUART, V57, P219, DOI 10.2307/3219866 Sunstein CR, 2004, VA LAW REV, V90, P301, DOI 10.2307/3202429 McGuire KT, 2004, POLIT ANAL, V12, P128, DOI 10.1093/pan/mph005 Wakefield S, 2004, SOCIOL INQ, V74, P128, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2004.00082.x Banaji MR, 2004, PSYCHOL INQ, V15, P279 Soule Sarah, 2004, Social Movements and Organization Theory: Building Bridges Cross FB, 2003, CALIF LAW REV, V91, P1457, DOI 10.2307/3481397 Schultz V, 2003, YALE LAW J, V112, P2061, DOI 10.2307/3657474 Kagan RA, 2003, LAW SOC REV, V37, P51, DOI 10.1111/1540-5893.3701002 Krawiec Kimberly D., 2003, WASH U L Q, V81, P487 Lounsbury M., 2003, SOCIO-ECON REV, V1, P71, DOI 10.1093/soceco/1.1.71 Stryker Robin, 2003, SOCIO-ECON REV, V1, P335, DOI 10.1093/soceco/1.3.335 Maveety Nancy, 2003, PIONEERS JUDICIAL BE, P1 Agresti A, 2002, CATEGORICAL DATA ANA SEGAL JEFFREY A., 2002, SUPREME COURT ATTITU Ehrlich E, 2002, Fundamental principles of the sociology of law Cigler Allan J., 2002, INTEREST GROUP POLIT Edelman LaurenB, 2002, LEGALITY COMMUNITY I Schneiberg M, 2002, RES SOC ORG, V19, P39 Giles MW, 2001, POLIT RES QUART, V54, P623, DOI 10.1177/106591290105400307 Schneiberg M, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P101, DOI 10.1086/323574 Edelman LB, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P1589, DOI 10.1086/321303 Scott W.R, 2001, I ORG Bisom-Rapp Susan, 2001, BERKELEY J EMP LAB L, V22, P1 Bisom-Rapp Susan, 2001, U ARK LITTLE ROCK L, V24, P147 Epstein L, 2000, POLIT RES QUART, V53, P625, DOI 10.2307/449201 Freeman J, 2000, NEW YORK U LAW REV, V75, P543 Gaertner S. L., 2000, REDUCING INTERGROUP Scott W. R., 2000, I CHANGE HEALTHCARE Stryker R, 2000, RES SOC ORG, V17, P179 Dowd Timothy, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P635 Nelson RL, 2000, LAW SOC REV, V34, P457, DOI 10.2307/3115090 Suh Susan A., 2000, Prismatic Metropolis, P523 Stangor Charles, 2000, STEREOTYPES PREJUDIC Haney Lopez IanF, 2000, Yale Law Review, V109, P1717 Kelly E, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P455, DOI 10.1086/210317 Edelman LB, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P406, DOI 10.1086/210316 Leiter B, 1999, COLUMBIA LAW REV, V99, P1138, DOI 10.2307/1123484 Schneiberg M, 1999, POLIT SOC, V27, P67, DOI 10.1177/0032329299027001004 Pinello DR, 1999, JUSTICE SYST J, V20, P219 Albiston C, 1999, LAW SOC REV, V33, P869, DOI 10.2307/3115153 Nelson Robert L., 1999, LEGALIZING GENDER IN Bisom-Rapp Susan, 1999, FLA ST U L REV, V26, P959 Gunningham N, 1999, REGULATING WORKPLACE Gregg Christopher, 1999, SUPREME COURT AM POL Heimer CA, 1999, LAW SOC REV, V33, P17, DOI 10.2307/3115095 Segal Jeffrey A., 1999, MAJORITY RULE MINORI Rubin Edward L., 1999, Judicial Policymaking in theModern State: How the Courts Reformed America's Prisons Edelman LB, 1999, LAW SOC REV, V33, P941, DOI 10.2307/3115155 Edelman LB, 1999, RES SOC STR, V17, P107 Gillman Howard, 1999, SUPREME COURT DECISI Dobbin F, 1998, AM J SOCIOL, V104, P441, DOI 10.1086/210044 Poole KT, 1998, AM J POLIT SCI, V42, P954, DOI 10.2307/2991737 Cross FB, 1998, YALE LAW J, V107, P2155, DOI 10.2307/797418 Epstein Lee, 1998, CHOICES JUSTICES MAK Wahlbeck PJ, 1998, AM J POLIT SCI, V42, P294, DOI 10.2307/2991757 Cahill Mia, 1998, How Law Matters? Vaughan D, 1998, LAW SOC REV, V32, P23, DOI 10.2307/827748 Freeman J, 1997, UCLA LAW REV, V45, P1 Spriggs JF, 1997, POLIT RES QUART, V50, P365, DOI 10.2307/448962 Poole Kenneth T., 1997, C POLITICAL EC HIST Long J. Scott, 1997, REGRESSION MODELS CA Edelman LB, 1997, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V23, P479, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.479 Cross FrankB, 1997, Northwestern Law Review, V92, P251 Knight J, 1996, AM J POLIT SCI, V40, P1018, DOI 10.2307/2111740 Sutton JR, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P794, DOI 10.2307/2096454 Suchman MC, 1996, LAW SOCIAL INQUIRY, V21, P903, DOI 10.1111/j.1747-4469.1996.tb00100.x Suchman MC, 1996, LAW SOCIAL INQUIRY, V21, P679, DOI 10.1111/j.1747-4469.1996.tb00093.x SEGAL J, 1996, POLITICAL SCIENCE, V40, P971 Seron C, 1996, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V22, P187, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.22.1.187 Paternoster Raymond, 1996, LAW SOC REV, V30, P549 Chambliss Elizabeth, 1996, Temple Political and Civil Rights Law Review, V6, P1 KRIEGER LH, 1995, STANFORD LAW REV, V47, P1161, DOI 10.2307/1229191 KASS RE, 1995, J AM STAT ASSOC, V90, P773, DOI 10.2307/2291091 GREENWALD AG, 1995, PSYCHOL REV, V102, P4, DOI 10.1037//0033-295X.102.1.4 Raftery AE, 1995, SOCIOL METHODOL, V25, P111, DOI 10.2307/271063 SUTTON JR, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V99, P944, DOI 10.1086/230368 Musheno Michael, 1994, Law and Policy, V16, P267, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9930.1994.tb00126.x GWARTNEYGIBBS PA, 1994, LAW SOC REV, V28, P265, DOI 10.2307/3054147 DOBBIN F, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V99, P396, DOI 10.1086/230269 SONGER DR, 1993, POLIT RES QUART, V46, P339, DOI 10.2307/448891 Baumgartner Frank R., 1993, AGENDAS INSTABILITY Greene WH, 1993, ECONOMETRIC ANAL SEGAL JEFFREY A., 1993, SUPREME COURT ATTITU EDELMAN LB, 1993, LAW SOC REV, V27, P497, DOI 10.2307/3054103 TEUBNER G., 1993, LAW AUTOPOIETIC SYST Blumrosen Alfred, 1993, MODERN LAW LAW TRANS EDELMAN LB, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V97, P1531, DOI 10.1086/229939 Ayres I., 1992, RESPONSIVE REGULATIO Baum Lawrence, 1992, The Constitution and American Political Development: An Institutional Perspective, P150 BARON JN, 1991, AM J SOCIOL, V96, P1362, DOI 10.1086/229690 Powell W.P., 1991, NEW I ORG ANAL Friedland R., 1991, NEW I ORG ANAL, P232 WILLIAMS P, 1991, ALCHEMY RACE RIGHTS Fligstein Neil, 1991, NEW I ORG ANAL, P311 Petterson Stephen, 1991, LAW POLICY, V13, P73, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9930.1991.tb00058.x BRINT S, 1991, NEW I ORG ANAL, P337 WHITE LE, 1990, BUFFALO LAW REV, V38, P1 EDELMAN LB, 1990, AM J SOCIOL, V95, P1401, DOI 10.1086/229459 ORTON JD, 1990, ACAD MANAGE REV, V15, P203, DOI 10.2307/258154 Clegg Stewart R., 1990, MODERN ORG ORG STUDI Fligstein N., 1990, TRANSFORMATION CORPO Sarat Austin, 1990, YALE JL HUMANITIES, V2, P343 Schultz Vicki, 1990, HARVARD LAW REV, V103, P1750 SEGAL JA, 1989, AM POLIT SCI REV, V83, P557, DOI 10.2307/1962405 ROSEN RE, 1989, INDIANA LAW J, V64, P479 Kimberle W., 1989, U CHI LEGAL F, P139 Brunsson Nils, 1989, ORG HYPOCRISY TALK D BORDT RL, 1988, J RES CRIME DELINQ, V25, P7, DOI 10.1177/0022427888025001002 Bumiller K, 1988, CIVIL RIGHTS SOC SOC Teubner Gunther, 1988, AUTOPOIETIC LAW NEW Lempert Richard, 1988, Autopoietic Law: A New Approach to Law and Society, P152 Edelman Lauren, 1988, I PATTERNS ORG CULTU Elliot A.Tanis, 1988, PROBABILITY STAT INF BARON JN, 1986, AM J SOCIOL, V92, P350, DOI 10.1086/228504 Perrow C., 1986, COMPLEX ORG CRITICAL BURSTEIN P, 1986, LAW SOC REV, V20, P355, DOI 10.2307/3053580 Jacoby Sanford M, 1985, EMPLOYING BUREAUCRAC, P1900 Luhmann Niklas, 1985, DILEMMAS LAW WELFARE Burstein Paul, 1985, DISCRIMINATION JOBS Hawkins Keith, 1984, ENV ENFORCEMENT REGU TUSHNET M, 1984, TEX LAW REV, V62, P1363 Scholz John T., 1984, ENFORCING REGULATION, P67 DIMAGGIO PJ, 1983, AM SOCIOL REV, V48, P147, DOI 10.2307/2095101 Maddala G. S, 1983, LTD DEPENDENT QUALIT Meyer J. W., 1983, ORG ENV RITUAL RATIO Gordon David M., 1982, SEGMENTED WORK DIVID Pfeffer J., 1981, POWER ORG FELSTINER WLF, 1981, LAW SOC REV, V15, P631 KATZ RW, 1981, TECHNOMETRICS, V23, P243, DOI 10.2307/1267787 MILLER RE, 1981, LAW SOC REV, V15, P525 Burawoy M., 1979, MANUFACTURING CONSEN Edwards Richard, 1979, Contested Terrain: The Transformation of the Workplace in the Twentieth Century Weber M, 1978, EC SOC OUTLINE INTER MEYER JW, 1977, AM J SOCIOL, V83, P340, DOI 10.1086/226550 GAERTNER SL, 1977, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V35, P691, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.35.10.691 BALBUS ID, 1977, LAW SOC REV, V11, P571, DOI 10.2307/3053132 Kantor RebeccaMoss, 1977, MEN WOMEN CORPORATIO WEICK KE, 1976, ADMIN SCI QUART, V21, P1, DOI 10.2307/2391875 SHIBATA R, 1976, BIOMETRIKA, V63, P117, DOI 10.1093/biomet/63.1.117 Stone C. D., 1975, LAW ENDS SOCIAL CONT Friedman Lawrence M., 1975, LEGAL SYSTEM SOCIAL SCHEINGOLD Stuart A, 1974, POLITICS RIGHTS Galanter Marc, 1974, LAW SOC REV, V9, P95 Stigler G. J., 1971, BELL J ECON, V2, P359 Selznick P, 1969, LAW SOC IND JUSTICE MAYHEW L, 1969, AM SOCIOL REV, V34, P309, DOI 10.2307/2092497 Macaulay Stewart, 1963, AM SOCIOL REV, V28, P55 KRISLOV S, 1963, YALE LAW J, V72, P694, DOI 10.2307/794698 Selznick Philip, 1957, LEADERSHIP ADM SOCIO Hurst JamesWillard, 1956, LAW CONDITIONS FREED Marx Karl, 1954, CAPITAL Selznick P., 1949, TVA GRASS ROOTS Durkheim E., 1949, DIVISION LABOR SOC Gerth H.H., 1946, M WEBER ESSAYS SOCIO Roethlisberger FJ, 1939, MANAGEMENT WORKER Slichter S., 1919, TURNOVER FACTORY LAB Holmes Jr. Oliver Wendell, 1897, HARVARD LAW REV, V10, P457 NR 196 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD NOV PY 2011 VL 117 IS 3 BP 888 EP 954 DI 10.1086/661984 PG 67 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 855NZ UT WOS:000297572700005 ER PT J AU King, BG AF King, Brayden G. TI The Tactical Disruptiveness of Social Movements: Sources of Market and Mediated Disruption in Corporate Boycotts SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE social movements; corporate boycotts; disruption; media attention; corporate reputation ID LOCAL NEWSPAPER COVERAGE; ANTI-BIOTECH MOVEMENT; RESOURCE MOBILIZATION; POLITICAL MEDIATION; PRIVATE REGULATION; CONSUMER BOYCOTTS; SELECTION BIAS; PUBLIC SPHERE; UNITED-STATES; PROTEST AB This article examines factors associated with social movements' abilities to disrupt corporate targets. I identify two kinds of disruption: market disruption and mediated disruption. Market disruption deters the ability of the corporate target to effectively accrue and use market resources, while mediated disruption occurs as a tactic communicates a movement's claims about the target through third party intermediaries, like the media, thereby disrupting the target's image and reputation. Using data on corporate boycotts in the United States from 1990 to 2005, the analyses assess the extent to which movement characteristics or target characteristics cause stock price declines of boycotted companies-i.e., market disruption-and the frequency of national media attention given to boycotts-i.e., mediated disruption. The analyses indicate that target characteristics matter more in shaping a boycott's initial market disruption; however, both movement and target characteristics affect mediated disruption. Certain movement characteristics, like social movement organization (SMO) formality, public demonstrations, and celebrity endorsements, enable mediated disruption but have no effect on market disruption. A firm's size makes it vulnerable to both market and mediated disruption, while slack resources help a firm avoid market disruption. A target's reputational ranking initially buffers it from market disruption but increases its vulnerability to mediated disruption. The results indicate that the two kinds of disruption are interrelated. Market disruption has a marginal effect on the intensity of subsequent media coverage and ongoing media attention accentuates further market disruption. C1 Northwestern Univ, Kellogg Sch Management, Evanston, IL 60091 USA. RP King, BG (reprint author), Northwestern Univ, Kellogg Sch Management, 2001 Sheridan Rd, Evanston, IL 60091 USA EM b-king@kellogg.northwestern.edu CR Andrews KT, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P841, DOI 10.1177/0003122410386689 Sobieraj S, 2010, SOC PROBL, V57, P505, DOI 10.1525/sp.2010.57.4.505 Etzion D, 2010, ORGAN SCI, V21, P1092, DOI 10.1287/orsc.1090.0494 Ingram P, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V116, P53 Vogel D, 2010, BUS SOC, V49, P68, DOI 10.1177/0007650309343407 King BG, 2010, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V36, P249, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.012809.102606 Weber K, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P106 SOULE SA, 2009, CONTENTIOUS PRIVATE King BG, 2008, ADMIN SCI QUART, V53, P395, DOI 10.2189/asqu.53.3.395 Schneiberg M, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P635 Walker ET, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P35, DOI 10.1086/588737 Sauder M, 2008, ADMIN SCI QUART, V53, P209, DOI 10.2189/asqu.53.2.209 Kennedy MT, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P270 Baron DP, 2007, J ECON MANAGE STRAT, V16, P599, DOI 10.1111/j.1530-9134.2007.00152.x Bartley T, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P297, DOI 10.1086/518871 King BG, 2007, ADMIN SCI QUART, V52, P413 Espeland WN, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P1, DOI 10.1086/517897 Olzak S, 2007, SOC FORCES, V85, P1561, DOI 10.1353/sof.2007.0076 Martin AW, 2007, SOC FORCES, V85, P1413, DOI 10.1353/sof.2007.0047 Haveman HA, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P117 Seidman Gay, 2007, BOYCOTT LABOR RIGHTS Rohlinger DA, 2006, SOC PROBL, V53, P537, DOI 10.1525/sp.2006.53.4.537 Rojas F, 2006, SOC FORCES, V84, P2147, DOI 10.1353/sof.2006.0107 Piven Frances Fox, 2006, CHALLENGING AUTHORIT Luders J, 2006, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P963, DOI 10.1086/498632 COOMBS WT, 2006, J COMMUNICATION MANA, V10, P123, DOI 10.1108/13632540610664698 George G, 2005, ACAD MANAGE J, V48, P661 King BG, 2005, SOC FORCES, V83, P1211, DOI 10.1353/sof.2005.0037 Davis G.F., 2005, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS ORG Hochschild Adam, 2005, BURY CHAINS PROPHETS Mizruchi MS, 2004, THEOR SOC, V33, P579, DOI 10.1023/B:RYSO.0000045757.93910.ed Koopmans R, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P198, DOI 10.1086/386271 Koopmans R, 2004, THEOR SOC, V33, P367, DOI 10.1023/B:RYSO.0000038603.34963.de Zajac EJ, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P433 Meyer DS, 2004, SOC FORCES, V82, P1457, DOI 10.1353/sof.2004.0082 Schurman R, 2004, SOC PROBL, V51, P243, DOI 10.1525/sp.2004.51.2.243 Earl J, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P65, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.30.012703.110603 CLEMENS ES, 2004, BLACKWELL COMPANION, P155, DOI 10.1002/9780470999103.ch7 Esbenshade J., 2004, MONITORING SWEATSHOP Fombrun C. J., 2004, FAME FORTUNE SUCCESS Earl J, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P581, DOI 10.2307/1519740 Sine WD, 2003, MANAGE SCI, V49, P478, DOI 10.1287/mnsc.49.4.478.14416 Carroll CE, 2003, CORPORATE REPUTATION, V16, P36, DOI 10.1057/palgrave.crr.1540188 Lounsbury M., 2003, SOCIO-ECON REV, V1, P71, DOI 10.1093/soceco/1.1.71 Roberts PW, 2002, STRATEGIC MANAGE J, V23, P1077, DOI 10.1002/smj.274 Rohlinger DA, 2002, SOCIOL QUART, V43, P479, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.2002.tb00063.x King Andrew, 2002, ORG POLICY NATURAL E, P393 Lounsbury M, 2001, ADMIN SCI QUART, V46, P29, DOI 10.2307/2667124 Baron DP, 2001, J ECON MANAGE STRAT, V10, P7, DOI 10.1162/105864001300122548 McAdam D., 2001, DYNAMICS CONTENTION GREISING D, 2001, CHICAGO TRIBUNE 0810 SCHULTZ M, 2001, CORPORATE REPUTATION, V4, P24, DOI 10.1057/palgrave.crr.1540130 MANHEIM JB, 2001, DEATH 1000 CUTS CORP HOFFMAN A, 2001, ORGAN SCI, V12, P415 Oliver PE, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P463, DOI 10.1086/316964 Appelbaum Richard, 2000, LABEL INEQUALITY LOS Cress DM, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P1063, DOI 10.1086/210399 Walgrave S., 2000, MOBILIZATION, V5, P217 Oliver PE, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P38, DOI 10.1086/210267 Giugni Marco, 1999, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS MAT, P3 Friedman M., 1999, CONSUMER BOYCOTTS EF KLEIN N, 1999, LOGO TAKING AIM BRAN RUCHT D, 1999, MOBILIZATION, V4, P151 Koku PS, 1997, J BUS RES, V40, P15, DOI 10.1016/S0148-2963(96)00279-2 Ratneshwar S, 1997, INT J RES MARK, V14, P245, DOI 10.1016/S0167-8116(97)00007-4 McWilliams A, 1997, ACAD MANAGE J, V40, P626, DOI 10.2307/257056 Fording RC, 1997, AM J POLIT SCI, V41, P1, DOI 10.2307/2111707 McCarthy JD, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P478, DOI 10.2307/2096360 DAVIDSON WN, 1995, BUSINESS SOC, V34, P171, DOI 10.1177/000765039503400204 SANBONMATSU DM, 1994, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V66, P1020, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.66.6.1020 ELSBACH KD, 1994, ADMIN SCI QUART, V39, P57, DOI 10.2307/2393494 HAVEMAN HA, 1993, ADMIN SCI QUART, V38, P593, DOI 10.2307/2393338 GAMSON WA, 1993, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V528, P114, DOI 10.1177/0002716293528001009 PUTNAM T, 1993, BUSINESS SOC REV, V85, P47 DAVIS GF, 1992, ADMIN SCI QUART, V37, P605, DOI 10.2307/2393474 BENFORD RD, 1992, SOCIOL INQ, V62, P36, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.1992.tb00182.x GAMSON WA, 1992, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V18, P373, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.18.1.373 GAVER JJ, 1992, ACCOUNT REV, V67, P172 *GAL RES INC, 1992, ENC ASS NAT ORG US KELLY SP, 1991, MINNEAPOLIS ST 1217, pB1 FOMBRUN C, 1990, ACAD MANAGE J, V33, P233, DOI 10.2307/256324 Gamson W., 1990, STRATEGY SOCIAL PROT RAMIREZ A, 1990, NY TIMES, pD1 GAMSON WA, 1989, AM J SOCIOL, V95, P1, DOI 10.1086/229213 HILGARTNER S, 1988, AM J SOCIOL, V94, P53, DOI 10.1086/228951 PRUITT SW, 1988, J LABOR RES, V9, P285, DOI 10.1007/BF02685318 GARRETT DE, 1987, J MARKETING, V51, P46, DOI 10.2307/1251128 PRUITT SW, 1986, J CONSUM POLICY, V9, P375 JENKINS JC, 1986, AM SOCIOL REV, V51, P812, DOI 10.2307/2095369 BROWN SJ, 1985, J FINANC ECON, V14, P3, DOI 10.1016/0304-405X(85)90042-X FRIEDMAN M, 1985, J CONSUM AFF, V19, P96 GAMSON WA, 1984, THEOR SOC, V13, P567, DOI 10.1007/BF00156903 JENKINS JC, 1983, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V9, P527, DOI 10.1146/annurev.so.09.080183.002523 McAdam Douglas, 1982, POLITICAL PROCESS DE Calhoun Craig, 1982, QUESTION CLASS STRUG Bourgeois L. J., 1981, ACAD MANAGE REV, V6, P29, DOI 10.2307/257138 Gitlin T., 1980, WHOLE WORLD IS WATCH ZALD MN, 1978, AM J SOCIOL, V83, P823, DOI 10.1086/226634 MCCARTHY JD, 1977, AM J SOCIOL, V82, P1212, DOI 10.1086/226464 Piven F.F., 1977, POOR PEOPLES MOVEMEN JENKINS JC, 1977, AM SOCIOL REV, V42, P249, DOI 10.2307/2094604 PATELL JM, 1976, J ACCOUNTING RES, V14, P246, DOI 10.2307/2490543 VOGEL D, 1975, POLITY, V8, P5, DOI 10.2307/3234345 DOWNS A, 1972, PUBLIC INTEREST, P38 FAMA EF, 1970, J FINANC, V25, P383, DOI 10.2307/2325486 LIPSKY M, 1968, AM POLIT SCI REV, V62, P1144, DOI 10.2307/1953909 Thompson J. D., 1967, ORG ACTION Selznick P., 1949, TVA GRASS ROOTS STUD MICHELS R, 1949, POLITICAL PARTIES LAZARSFELD PF, 1948, COMMUNICATION IDEAS, P95 Berle A., 1932, MODERN CORPORATION P NR 111 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD NOV PY 2011 VL 58 IS 4 BP 491 EP 517 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.4.491 PG 27 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 849MO UT WOS:000297129800001 ER PT J AU Wade, L AF Wade, Lisa TI The Politics of Acculturation: Female Genital Cutting and the Challenge of Building Multicultural Democracies SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE female genital cutting; multiculturalism; feminism; medicine; culture ID MUSLIM WOMEN; DIFFERENCE; CULTURE; MUTILATION; EDUCATION; FEMINISM; GENDER AB Understanding how the idea of culture is mobilized in discursive contests is crucial for both theorizing and building multicultural democracies. To investigate this, I analyze a debate over whether we should relieve the "cultural need" for infibulation among immigrants by offering a "nick" in U.S. hospitals. Using interviews, newspaper coverage, and primary documents, I show that physicians and opponents of the procedure with contrasting models of culture disagreed on whether it represented cultural change. Opponents argued that the "nick" was fairly described as "female genital mutilation" and symbolically identical to more extensive cutting. Using a reified model, they imagined Somalis to be "culture-bound"; the adoption of a "nick" was simply a move from one genital cutting procedure to another. Unable to envision meaningful cultural adaptation, and presupposing the incompatibility of multiculturalism and feminism, they supported forced assimilation. Physicians, drawing on a dynamic model of culture, believed that adoption of the "nick" was meaningful cultural change, but overly idealized their ability to protect Somali girls from both Somali and U.S. patriarchy. Unduly confident, they failed to take oppression seriously, dismissing relevant constituencies and their concerns. Both models, then, influenced the outcome of this cultural conflict by shaping the perceptions of cultural change in problematic ways. Given the high-profile nature of "culture" in contemporary politics, these findings may very well extend to other issues that crystallize the supposed incommensurability of feminism and multiculturalism, as well as the wider debates about how societies can be both diverse and socially just. C1 Occidental Coll, Dept Sociol, Los Angeles, CA 90041 USA. RP Wade, L (reprint author), Occidental Coll, Dept Sociol, 1600 Campus Rd, Los Angeles, CA 90041 USA EM lwade@oxy.edu CR Diekema DS, 2010, PEDIATRICS, V125, P1088, DOI 10.1542/peds.2010-0187 American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) Committee on Bioethics, 2010, AAP News Room Equality Now, 2010 WHO UNFPA UNICEF and UNIFEM, 2010 Wade L, 2009, GENDER SOC, V23, P293, DOI 10.1177/0891243209334938 Rottmann SB, 2008, SOC POLIT, V15, P481, DOI 10.1093/sp/jxn017 Dustin M, 2008, ETHNICITIES, V8, P405, DOI 10.1177/1468796808092451 WHO, 2008, EL FEM GEN MUT INT S Said Edward W., 1993, FEM LEGAL STUD, DOI 10.1007/s10691-006-9050-x PIOT C, 2007, TRANSCULTURAL BODIES, P157 Phillips Anne, 2007, SEXUAL JUSTICE CULTU, P15 Deveaux Monique, 2007, Sexual Justice/Cultural Justice: Critical Perspectives in Political Theory and Practice, P139 Merry S. Engle, 2006, HUMAN RIGHTS GENDER Stabile CA, 2005, MEDIA CULT SOC, V27, P765, DOI 10.1177/0163443705055734 Mushaben Joyce, 2005, Crossing Over: Comparing Recent Migration in the United States and Europe, P182 Obiora Amede, 2005, Female Circumcision and the Politics of Knowledge: African Women in Imperialist Discourses, P307 Werbner Pnina, 2005, Hagar, V6, P25 Njambi W, 2004, FEMINIST THEORY, V5, P281, DOI 10.1177/1464700104040811 Saguy AC, 2003, WHAT IS SEXUAL HARASSMENT: FROM CAPITOL HILL TO THE SORBONNE, P1 Deitz Mary, 2003, Annual Review of Political Science, V6, P399 Phillips Anne, 2003, MOD LAW REV, V517, P510, DOI 10.1111/1468-2230.6604002 Abu-Lughod L, 2002, AM ANTHROPOL, V104, P783, DOI 10.1525/aa.2002.104.3.783 Cooke M, 2002, SIGNS, V28, P468, DOI 10.1086/340888 Anthias F, 2002, WOMEN STUD INT FORUM, V25, P275 Benhabib S, 2002, CLAIMS CULTURE EQUAL Boyle E.H., 2002, FEMALE GENITAL CUTTI Chanock Martin, 2002, Cultural Transformation and Human Rights in Africa, P38 Horowitz David, 2002, Front Page Magazine Fournier Pascale, 2002, MANITOBA LAW J, V29, P81 Shamsie Kamila, 2002, The Guardian Cowan J. K., 2001, CULTURE RIGHTS ANTHR, P152 Swidler A, 2001, TALK LOVE CULTURE MA Gruenbaum E, 2001, FEMALE CIRCUMCISION ERIKSEN TH, 2001, CULTURE RIGHTS ANTHR, P127 Cowan Jane K., 2001, CULTURE RIGHTS ANTHR, P201 COWAN JK, 2001, CULTURE RIGHTS ANTHR, P1 MERRY SE, 2001, CULTURE RIGHTS ANTHR, P31 Ahmadu Fuambai, 2001, Female `Circumcision' in Africa: Culture, Controversy, and Change, P283 Read JG, 2000, GENDER SOC, V14, P395, DOI 10.1177/089124300014003003 Rudy K, 2000, SIGNS, V25, P1051, DOI 10.1086/495518 Narayan U, 2000, SIGNS, V25, P1083, DOI 10.1086/495524 Fraser N, 2000, NEW LEFT REV, P107 Arndt S, 2000, SIGNS, V25, P709, DOI 10.1086/495479 Espiritu Yen L., 2000, ASIAN AM WOMEN MEN L Volpp Leti, 2000, YALE JL HUMAN, V12, P89 Isa Ab. Rahman, 1999, Reproductive Health Matters, V7, P137 Davies S, 1999, SOCIOL EDUC, V72, P1, DOI 10.2307/2673183 Sheldon S, 1998, BIOETHICS, V12, P263, DOI 10.1111/1467-8519.00117 Coleman DL, 1998, DUKE LAW J, V47, P717, DOI 10.2307/1372912 Narayan U., 1998, HYPATIA, V13, P86, DOI 10.2979/HYP.1998.13.2.86 Hirschmann N. J., 1998, CONSTELLATIONS, V5, P345, DOI 10.1111/1467-8675.00100 Lewis Hope, 1998, Buffalo Human Rights Law Review, V4, P123 NARAYAN UMA, 1997, DISLOCATING CULTURES Okin Susan, 1997, BOSTON REV, V22, P25 Brune Tom, 1996, Chicago Tribune Paulson Tom, 1996, Seattle Post-Intelligencer [Anonymous], 1996, Seattle Times, The Ostrom Carol, 1996, The Seattle Times Parekh B, 1995, ALTERN-SOC TRANSFORM, V20, P431 JACKSON JE, 1995, AM ETHNOL, V22, P3, DOI 10.1525/ae.1995.22.1.02a00010 Tully J, 1995, STRANGE MULTIPLICITY Abed Asali, 1995, Archives of Sexual Behavior, V24, P573 Razack Sherene, 1995, CANADIAN J WOMEN LAW, V8, P45 Fraser Nancy, 1995, New Left Review, V22, P67 Volpp Leti, 1994, HARV WOMENS LJ, V17, P57 HONDAGNEUSOTELO P, 1994, GENDERED TRANSITION Bloul Rachel, 1994, The European Journal of Women's Studies, V3, P251 TURNER T, 1993, CULT ANTHROPOL, V8, P411, DOI 10.1525/can.1993.8.4.02a00010 SEWELL WH, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1 CALMORE JO, 1992, SOUTHERN CALIF LAW R, V65, P2129 Gupta Akhil, 1992, CULTURAL ANTHR, V7, P14 ABU-LUGHOD Lila, 1991, RECAPTURING ANTHR WO, P137 Hill Collins P, 1991, BLACK FEMINIST THOUG GRUENBAUM E, 1991, SOC SCI MED, V33, P637, DOI 10.1016/0277-9536(91)90017-7 LAZREG M, 1988, FEMINIST STUD, V14, P81, DOI 10.2307/3178000 Spivak Gayatri Chakravorty, 1988, MARXISM INTERPRETATI, P271 Appadurai Arjun, 1988, CULTURAL ANTHR, V3, P36, DOI 10.1525/can.1988.3.1.02a00040 Mohanty Chandra, 1988, Third World Women and the Politics of Feminism, P51 Koso-Thomas O, 1987, CIRCUMCISION WOMEN S SWIDLER A, 1986, AM SOCIOL REV, V51, P273, DOI 10.2307/2095521 Spivak Gavatri Chakravorty, 1985, Subaltern Studies IV, P337 AHMED L, 1982, FEMINIST STUD, V8, P521, DOI 10.2307/3177710 Said Edward, 1978, ORIENTALISM Bourdieu P., 1977, OUTLINE THEORY PRACT NR 84 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD NOV PY 2011 VL 58 IS 4 BP 518 EP 537 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.4.518 PG 20 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 849MO UT WOS:000297129800002 ER PT J AU Silver, E Silver, SR Siennick, S Farkas, G AF Silver, Eric Silver, Stacy Rogers Siennick, Sonja Farkas, George TI Bodily Signs of Academic Success: An Empirical Examination of Tattoos and Grooming SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE tattoos; body; adolescence; deviance; grooming; education ID PHYSICAL ATTRACTIVENESS; UNITED-STATES; TEACHER EXPECTATIONS; ASIAN-AMERICANS; SCHOOL CONTEXT; BODY PIERCINGS; RISK BEHAVIOR; ADOLESCENTS; EDUCATION; DEVIANCE AB This study examined the relationship between bodily comportment (tattoos and grooming) and the likelihood of going to college among a national sample of 11,010 adolescents gathered as part of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. Results show that adolescents with tattoos and those judged as poorly groomed by Add Health interviewers were significantly less likely to go to college after graduating from high school. These effects were similar in magnitude to those of other well-known demographic correlates of educational attainment, including family SES and family structure. Results also show that involvement in deviant activities accounted for much of the lower likelihood of going to college among adolescents with tattoos. Similar results were observed across gender, SES, and race groups, with the exception of Asians, for whom the lower likelihood of going to college among those with tattoos was especially pronounced. Overall, this study supports the conclusion that bodily signs constitute an important and relatively untapped source of information for predicting college matriculation among adolescents. C1 [Silver, Eric] Penn State Univ, Dept Sociol, University Pk, PA 16802 USA. [Siennick, Sonja] Florida State Univ, Tallahassee, FL 32306 USA. [Farkas, George] Univ Calif Irvine, Irvine, CA USA. RP Silver, E (reprint author), Penn State Univ, Dept Sociol, 211 Oswald Tower, University Pk, PA 16802 USA EM esilver@psu.edu CR Frisco ML, 2010, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V51, P215, DOI 10.1177/0022146510372353 Mueller AS, 2010, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V51, P64, DOI 10.1177/0022146509361191 Koch JR, 2010, SOC SCI J, V47, P151, DOI 10.1016/j.soscij.2009.10.001 HAENFLER R, 2010, GOTHS GAMERS GRRRLS Harris KM, 2009, NATL LONGITUDINAL ST Adams J, 2009, DEVIANT BEHAV, V30, P266, DOI 10.1080/01639620802168817 Silver E, 2009, DEVIANT BEHAV, V30, P511, DOI 10.1080/01639620802467771 Crosnoe R, 2008, SOC FORCES, V86, P1189 Carlin JB, 2008, STATA J, V8, P49 MARTIN M, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P67 Crosnoe R, 2007, SOCIOL EDUC, V80, P241 Hitlin S, 2007, SOCIOL THEOR, V25, P170, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9558.2007.00303.x Bottrell D, 2007, J YOUTH STUD, V10, P597, DOI 10.1080/13676260701602662 KANG M, 2007, CONTEXTS, V6, P42, DOI 10.1525/ctx.2007.6.1.42 Nathanson C, 2006, J RES PERS, V40, P779, DOI 10.1016/j.jrp.2005.09.002 Laumann AE, 2006, J AM ACAD DERMATOL, V55, P413, DOI 10.1016/j.jaad.2006.03.026 Magnusson PKE, 2006, INT J EPIDEMIOL, V35, P658, DOI 10.1093/ije/dy1011 Felson RB, 2006, CRIMINOLOGY, V44, P299, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2006.00050.x Kosut M, 2006, DEVIANT BEHAV, V27, P73, DOI 10.1080/016396290950677 KOSUT M, 2006, J POP CULT, V33, P1035 Seiter JS, 2005, PSYCHOL REP, V96, P1113, DOI 10.2466/pr0.96.3c.1113-1120 Royston P., 2005, STATA J, V5, P1 Crosnoe R, 2004, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V45, P393 Persico N, 2004, J POLIT ECON, V112, P1019, DOI 10.1086/422566 Zeng Z, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P1075, DOI 10.1086/381914 Groves R. M., 2004, SURVEY METHODOLOGY Ferraro KF, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P707, DOI 10.2307/1519759 Reilly JJ, 2003, P NUTR SOC, V62, P611, DOI [10.1079/PNS2003276, 10.1079/PNS2003265] Farkas G, 2003, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V29, P541, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.29.010202.100023 Irwin K, 2003, SOCIOL SPECTRUM, V23, P27, DOI 10.1080/02732170390131911 Atkinson M, 2003, TATTOOED SOCIOGENESI Chantala K., 2003, INTRO ANAL ADD HLTH Pitts VL, 2003, IN THE FLESH: THE CULTURAL POLITICS OF BODY MODIFICATION, P1, DOI 10.1057/9781403979438 GECAS V, 2003, HDB LIFE COURSE, P369, DOI 10.1007/978-0-306-48247-2_17 Roberts TA, 2002, PEDIATRICS, V110, P1058, DOI 10.1542/peds.110.6.1058 Jang SJ, 2002, SOCIOL FORUM, V17, P647, DOI 10.1023/A:1021081524775 Osgood DW, 2002, J QUANT CRIMINOL, V18, P267, DOI 10.1023/A:1016008004010 Carroll ST, 2002, PEDIATRICS, V109, P1021, DOI 10.1542/peds.109.6.1021 Degelman D, 2002, PSYCHOL REP, V90, P507, DOI 10.2466/PR0.90.2.507-514 Gimlin D, 2002, BODY WORK BEAUTY SEL Thornton A, 2001, J MARRIAGE FAM, V63, P1009, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.01009.x Swidler A, 2001, TALK LOVE CULTURE MA Conley D, 2001, SOCIOL EDUC, V74, P59, DOI 10.2307/2673145 Rosenbaum James, 2001, COLL ALL CAREER PATH WHELAN D, 2001, AM DEMOGR, V23, P9 DEITZ WH, 2001, ANNU REV PUBL HEALTH, V22, P337 Shanahan MJ, 2000, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V26, P667, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.26.1.667 DeMello M, 2000, BODIES INSCRIPTION C Vail A, 2000, CURRENT RES OCCUPATI, V11, P55 DURKIN K, 2000, LEGAL CRIMINOL PSYCH, V5, P153, DOI 10.1348/135532500168065 Bordo Susan, 1999, MALE BODY NEW LOOK M Schneider B., 1999, AMBITIOUS GENERATION FEATHERSTONE M, 1999, BODY SOC, V5, P1, DOI 10.1177/1357034X99005002001 SWEETMAN P, 1999, BODY SOC, V5, P51, DOI 10.1177/1357034X99005002004 Mulford M, 1998, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P1565, DOI 10.1086/231401 Emirbayer M, 1998, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P962, DOI 10.1086/231294 Williams SJ, 1998, LIVED BODY SOCIOLOGI Wong P, 1998, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V41, P95 Phelan MP, 1998, SYMB INTERACT, V21, P277, DOI 10.1525/si.1998.21.3.277 Armstrong ML, 1997, APPL NURS RES, V10, P181, DOI 10.1016/S0897-1897(97)80560-5 Long J. Scott, 1997, REGRESSION MODELS CA Houghton SJ, 1996, J ADOLESCENT HEALTH, V19, P420, DOI 10.1016/S1054-139X(96)00023-7 Lupton D., 1996, FOOD BODY SELF Farkas G., 1996, HUMAN CAPITAL CULTUR DEMELLO M, 1995, J POP CULT, V29, P37, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-3840.1995.00037.x Balsamo A., 1995, BODY SOC, V1, P215, DOI 10.1177/1357034X95001003013 Hammermesh DS, 1994, AM ECON REV, V84, P1174 MOFFITT TE, 1993, PSYCHOL REV, V100, P674, DOI 10.1037/0033-295X.100.4.674 GORTMAKER SL, 1993, NEW ENGL J MED, V329, P1008, DOI 10.1056/NEJM199309303291406 Shilling C., 1993, BODY SOCIAL THEORY BUTLER J, 1993, BODY MATTERS DISCURS RITTS V, 1992, REV EDUC RES, V62, P413, DOI 10.3102/00346543062004413 Turner BryanS, 1992, REGULATING BODIES ES HAGAN J, 1991, AM SOCIOL REV, V56, P567, DOI 10.2307/2096080 Giddens A., 1991, MODERNITY SELF IDENT Sanders C, 1989, CUSTOMIZING BODY ART KENEALY P, 1988, J SOC PSYCHOL, V128, P373 RUBIN A, 1988, MARKS CIVILIZATION UMBERSON D, 1987, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V50, P227, DOI 10.2307/2786823 Connell R. W., 1987, GENDER POWER SOC PER SWIDLER A, 1986, AM SOCIOL REV, V51, P273, DOI 10.2307/2095521 Bourdieu P, 1986, HDB THEORY RES SOCIO, P241 HIRSCHMAN, 1986, SOC FORCES, V65, P1 Bourdieu P, 1984, DISTINCTION SOCIAL C Turner Bryan, 1984, BODY SOC Hochschild A, 1983, MANAGED HEART COMMER WEBSTER M, 1983, AM J SOCIOL, V89, P140 Dunn L. M., 1981, PEABODY PICTURE VOCA FOUCAULT M, 1980, POWER KNOWLEDGE SELE, P55 ELIAS N, 1978, THEOR SOC, V5, P243 Willis P., 1977, LEARNING LABOR WORKI CLIFFORD MM, 1973, SOCIOL EDUC, V46, P248, DOI 10.2307/2112099 Rosenthal R., 1968, PYGMALION CLASSROOM Becker H. S., 1963, OUTSIDERS STUDIES SO Goffman E., 1963, BEHAV PUBLIC PLACES Goffman Erving, 1961, ENCOUNTERS 2 STUDIES Coleman J. S., 1961, ADOLESCENT SOC NR 97 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD NOV PY 2011 VL 58 IS 4 BP 538 EP 564 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.4.538 PG 27 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 849MO UT WOS:000297129800003 ER PT J AU Clark, R AF Clark, Rob TI World Income Inequality in the Global Era: New Estimates, 1990-2008 SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE economic growth; globalization; mobility; poverty; world income inequality ID ECONOMIC-GROWTH; CAPITAL PENETRATION; FOREIGN-INVESTMENT; DEPENDENCE; GLOBALIZATION; CONVERGENCE; INTEGRATION; EUROPE; TRENDS; PERSISTENCE AB Several studies have recently found that world income inequality declined during the closing years of the twentieth century. However, these studies feature a number of shortcomings, including the use of outdated national income estimates to measure inequality between countries, as well as sparse data to capture the smaller (but growing) component found within countries. The current study addresses these concerns and offers new estimates of world income inequality based on 151 countries covering 95 percent of the world's population during the 1990-2008 period. Overall, the results are fairly compatible with prior efforts, lending greater confidence to earlier findings. Nevertheless, the results suggest that prior studies covering the 1990s overestimate the decline in between-country inequality, but underestimate the rise in within-country inequality. Consequently, total inequality did not begin to decline substantially until the post-2000 era. After presenting these estimates, I then examine factors associated with income mobility among the 15,100 subnational percentile groups in my data set. The results suggest that (a) the negative effect of inequality is larger than the positive effect of economic growth among the poorest 25 percent of the world's population, and (b) late industrialization has contributed to income convergence between countries, while economic globalization has primarily served to stretch income distributions within nations. C1 Univ Oklahoma, Dept Sociol, Norman, OK 73019 USA. RP Clark, R (reprint author), Univ Oklahoma, Dept Sociol, Kaufman Hall 331,780 Van Vleet Oval, Norman, OK 73019 USA EM robclark@ou.edu CR Clark R, 2011, SOC SCI MED, V72, P617, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2010.12.008 Fosu AK, 2010, SOC SCI QUART, V91, P1432, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-6237.2010.00739.x Bandelj N, 2010, SOC FORCES, V88, P2133 *UNCTAD, 2010, UNCTAD HDB STAT ONL *INT BANK REC DEV, 2010, WORLD DEV IND Beckfield J, 2009, INT J COMP SOCIOL, V50, P486, DOI 10.1177/0020715209339282 Rasler K, 2009, INT J COMP SOCIOL, V50, P425, DOI 10.1177/0020715209339881 Solt F, 2009, SOC SCI QUART, V90, P231, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-6237.2009.00614.x Korzeniewicz R.P., 2009, UNVEILING INEQUALITY Milanovic Branko, 2009, 5061 WORLD BANK *STAT CORP, 2009, STAT 11 1 Mahutga MC, 2008, INT J COMP SOCIOL, V49, P429, DOI 10.1177/0020715208097788 Anand S, 2008, J ECON LIT, V46, P57, DOI 10.1257/jel.46.1.57 UNU-WIDER, 2008, WORLD INC IN DAT VER FENG W, 2008, BOUNDARIES CATEGORIE *INT COMP PROGR, 2008, 2005 INT COMP PROGR Lee CS, 2007, SOC FORCES, V86, P77, DOI 10.1353/sof.2007.0102 Brady D, 2007, STUD COMP INT DEV, V42, P1, DOI 10.1007/s12116-007-9003-7 *INT BANK REC DEV, 2007, WORLD DEV IND CD ROM *INT COMP PROGR, 2007, 2005 INT COMP PROGR Beckfield J, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P964 Mahutga MC, 2006, SOC FORCES, V84, P1863, DOI 10.1353/sof.2006.0098 Sala-I-Martin X, 2006, Q J ECON, V121, P351, DOI 10.1162/qjec.2006.121.2.351 Dowrick S, 2005, REV INCOME WEALTH, P201 Milanovic B., 2005, WORLDS APART MEASURI Firebaugh G, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P283, DOI 10.1086/421541 Kentor J, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P301, DOI 10.2307/1519770 Arrighi G, 2003, STUD COMP INT DEV, V38, P3, DOI 10.1007/BF02686319 Firebaugh G., 2003, NEW GEOGRAPHY GLOBAL Bourguignon F, 2002, AM ECON REV, V92, P727, DOI 10.1257/00028280260344443 Alderson AS, 2002, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P1244, DOI 10.1086/341329 Bhalla Surjit, 2002, IMAGINE THERES NO CO Goesling B, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P745, DOI 10.2307/3088956 Chatterjee S, 2000, REGRESSION ANAL EXAM Alderson AS, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P606, DOI 10.2307/2657259 Firebaugh G, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V104, P1597, DOI 10.1086/210218 Rodrik D., 1999, NEW GLOBAL EC DEV CO Schultz TP, 1998, J POPUL ECON, V11, P307, DOI 10.1007/s001480050072 Chase-Dunn Christopher, 1998, GLOBAL FORMATION STR Kentor J, 1998, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P1024, DOI 10.1086/231295 Korzeniewicz RP, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P1000, DOI 10.1086/231038 Dixon WJ, 1996, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P543, DOI 10.1086/230956 Firebaugh G, 1996, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P563, DOI 10.1086/230957 Dixon WJ, 1996, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P576, DOI 10.1086/230958 SACHS JD, 1995, BROOKINGS PAP ECO AC, P1 FIREBAUGH G, 1994, AM SOCIOL REV, V59, P631, DOI 10.2307/2096441 FIREBAUGH G, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P105, DOI 10.1086/229970 Harrison B., 1988, GREAT U TURN CORPORA Kuznets S, 1955, AM ECON REV, V45, P1 NR 49 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD NOV PY 2011 VL 58 IS 4 BP 565 EP 592 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.4.565 PG 28 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 849MO UT WOS:000297129800004 ER PT J AU Fine, GA Xu, B AF Fine, Gary Alan Xu, Bin TI Honest Brokers: The Politics of Expertise in the "Who Lost China?" Debate SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE expertise; reputation; politics; China; Communism ID POLICY; CONSEQUENCES; SOCIOLOGY AB Complex social systems require knowledge specialists who provide information that political actors rely on to solve policy challenges. Successful advice is unproblematic; more significant is assigning institutional blame in the aftermath of advice considered wrong or harmful, undercutting state security. How do experts, operating within epistemic communities, preserve their reputation in the face of charges of incompetence or malice? Attacks on experts and their sponsors can be an effective form of contentious politics, a wedge to denounce other institutional players. To examine the politics of expertise we analyze the debate in the early 1950s over "Who Lost China?," the congressional attempt to assign responsibility for the fall of the Nationalist regime to the Communists. Using a "strong case," we examine political battles over the motives of Professor Owen Lattimore. For epistemic authority an expert must be defined as qualified (having appropriate credentials), influential (providing consequential information), and innocent (demonstrating epistemic neutrality). We focus on two forms of attack: smears (an oppositional presentation of a set of linked claims) and degradation ceremonies (the institutional awarding of stigma). We differentiate these by the critic's links to systems of power. Smears appear when reputational rivals lack power to make their claims stick, while degradation ceremonies operate through dominance within an institutional setting. Policy experts are awarded provisional credibility, but this access to an autonomous realm of knowledge can be countered by opponents with alternate sources of power. Ultimately expertise involves not only knowledge, but also the presentation of a validated self. C1 [Fine, Gary Alan] Northwestern Univ, Dept Sociol, Evanston, IL 60208 USA. [Xu, Bin] Florida Int Univ, Miami, FL 33199 USA. RP Fine, GA (reprint author), Northwestern Univ, Dept Sociol, 1810 Chicago Ave, Evanston, IL 60208 USA EM g-fine@northwestern.edu CR Pontikes E, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P456, DOI 10.1177/0003122410368929 Wagner-Pacifici R, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P1351 EYAL G, 2010, AUTISM MATRIX FLIGSTEIN N, 2010, BERKELEY J SOCIOL, V54, P23 Schwartz B, 2009, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V72, P123 COSSU A, 2009, DRAMA SELF CRI UNPUB Yin R., 2008, CASE STUDY RES DESIG Rowe WT, 2007, J ASIAN STUD, V66, P759, DOI 10.1017/SO021911807000952 Pie Ike R.A., 2007, HONEST BROKER MAKING Fine GA, 2006, MOBILIZATION, V11, P405 Fine GA, 2006, SOC PROBL, V53, P3, DOI 10.1525/sp.2006.53.1.3 Alexander J., 2006, SOCIAL PERFORMANCE S THORPE C, 2006, OPPENHEIMER TRAGIC I Adut A, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P213, DOI 10.1086/428816 Tetlock PE, 2005, EXPERT POLITICAL JUDGMENT: HOW GOOD IS IT, HOW CAN WE KNOW, P1 HERSH S, 2005, DEMOCRACY NO 0126 Herzstein Robert Edwin, 2005, HR LUCE TIME AM CRUS Fuller S., 2005, INTELLECTUAL Adut A, 2004, THEOR SOC, V33, P529, DOI 10.1023/B:RYSO.0000045718.42431.7d RICH A., 2004, THINK TANKS PUBLIC P Lilley James, 2004, CHINA HANDS 9 DECADE YBARRA M, 2004, WASHINGTON GONE CRAZ Hung HF, 2003, SOCIOL THEOR, V21, P254, DOI 10.1111/1467-9558.00188 Alexander J. C, 2003, MEANINGS SOCIAL LIFE Kurzman C, 2002, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V28, P63, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.28.110601.140745 Fine G. A, 2001, DIFFICULT REPUTATION Portes A, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P1, DOI 10.2307/2657287 Hilgartner S., 2000, SCI STAGE EXPERT ADV Wagner-Pacifici R., 2000, THEORIZING STANDOFF Boltanski L, 1999, DISTANT SUFFERING MO Pepper Suzanne, 1999, CIVIL WAR CHINA POLI Schrecker Ellen, 1998, MANY ARE CRIMES MCCA Rescher N., 1998, PREDICTING FUTURE IN WALKER RL, 1998, NATL INTEREST, V53, P94 Epstein Steven, 1996, IMPURE SCI AIDS ACTI Stapel D.A., 1996, POLITICAL BEHAV, V18, P289, DOI 10.1007/BF01498603 KLEHR H, 1996, AMERASIA SPY CASE PR RAND PETER, 1995, CHINA HANDS ADVENTUR KOLLOCK P, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V100, P313, DOI 10.1086/230539 Gambetta D., 1993, SICILIAN MAFIA BUSIN Lewis Lionel S., 1993, COLD WAR ACAD GOVERN HAAS PM, 1992, INT ORGAN, V46, P1 Beck U., 1992, RISK SOC Becker H, 1992, WHAT IS CASE EXPLORI Newman Robert P., 1992, O LATTIMORE LOSS CHI Proctor Robert N., 1991, VALUE FREE SCI PURIT Giddens A, 1990, CONSEQUENCES MODERNI NEILS P, 1990, CHINA IMAGES LIFE TI Lang G., 1990, ETCHED MEMORY BUILDI Tuchman G., 1989, EDGING WOMEN OUT VIC HOOPER PF, 1988, PAC AFF, V61, P98, DOI 10.2307/2758074 BOURDIEU P, 1988, HOMO ACAD EVANS PM, 1988, J FAIRBANK AM UNDERS LAUREN PG, 1987, CHINA HANDS LEGACY E Habermas J, 1984, THEORY COMMUNICATIVE FREIDSON E, 1984, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V10, P1 HENSHEL RL, 1982, BRIT J SOCIOL, V33, P511, DOI 10.2307/589359 FAIRBANK JK, 1982, CHINABOUND 50 YEAR M BOUDON R, 1982, UNINTENDED CONSEQUEN ATHENS L, 1980, VIOLENT CRIMINAL ACT SNOW DA, 1979, SYMB INTERACT, V2, P23, DOI 10.1525/si.1979.2.2.23 CHERN KS, 1976, POLITICAL SCI Q, V91, P631, DOI 10.2307/2148800 MUKERJI C, 1976, WORK OCCUPATION, V3, P63, DOI 10.1177/009392857600300103 TSOU T, 1975, AM FAILURE CHINA 194 KAHN EJ, 1975, CHINA HANDS THOMAS JN, 1974, I PACIFIC RELATIONS Merton Robert K., 1973, SOCIOLOGY SCI MARTIN BL, 1973, POLITY, V6, P149, DOI 10.2307/3234005 Shils E., 1972, INTELLECTUALS POWERS ANTONIO R, 1972, SOCIOLOGY, V23, P287 KEELEY J, 1969, CHINA LOBBY MAN STOR PELCOVITS NA, 1969, OLD CHINA HANDS FORE COSER LA, 1969, SOC PROBL, V16, P263, DOI 10.1525/sp.1969.16.3.03a00010 MERELMAN RM, 1969, SOCIOL QUART, V10, P216, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1969.tb01286.x Merton R. K., 1968, SOCIAL THEORY SOCIAL SCOTT MB, 1968, AM SOCIOL REV, V33, P46, DOI 10.2307/2092239 EDELMAN M, 1968, SYMBOLIC USES POLITI Goffman Erving, 1967, INTERACTION RITUAL E Erikson K. T., 1966, WAYWARD PURITANS KLAPP OE, 1964, SYMBOLIC LEADERS PUB JONAS FH, 1963, W POLITICAL Q, V16, P15, DOI 10.2307/445254 Bachrack Stanley, 1976, CHINA LOBBY AM POLIT JONAS FH, 1957, WESTERN POLIT QUART, V10, P374, DOI 10.2307/443695 GARFINKEL H, 1956, AM J SOCIOL, V61, P420, DOI 10.1086/221800 Buckley Jr. William F., 1954, MCCARTHY HIS ENEMIES FLYNN JT, 1953, LATTIMORE STORY FULL POTTER P, 1952, BALTIMORE SUN 0302, P1 POTTER P, 1952, BALTIMORE SUN 0302, P7 1952, BALTIMORE SUN 0328, P1 PHILLIPS C, 1952, NY TIMES 1221, pE3 *US C, 1952, REP COMM JUD INT SEC MARDER M, 1952, WASHINGTON POST 0227, P1 MARDER M, 1952, WASHINGTON POST 0227, P4 MARDER M, 1952, WASHINGTON POST 0306, P6 1952, WASHINGTON POST 0308, P6 Linebarger PMA, 1951, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V277, P177, DOI 10.1177/000271625127700118 UTLEY F, 1951, CHINA STORY ALSOP J, 1951, WASHINGTON POST 0905, P13 1950, BALTIMORE SUN 0228, P15 OWENS H, 1950, BALTIMORE SUN 0402, P1 OWENS H, 1950, BALTIMORE SUN 0402, P7 1950, BALTIMORE SUN 0629, P27 1950, BALTIMORE SUN 0629, P40 DAVIS J, 1950, CHARACTER ASSASSINAT 1950, CHICAGO TRIBUNE 0329, P18 EDWARDS W, 1950, CHICAGO TRIBUNE 0331, P1 EDWARDS W, 1950, CHICAGO TRIBUNE 0331, P6 1950, CHICAGO TRIBUNE 0423, P20 1950, GALLUP POLL 1950, NY TIMES 0404, P1 1950, NY TIMES 0404, P24 DALES D, 1950, NY TIMES 0409, P1 DALES D, 1950, NY TIMES 0409, P45 PHILLIPS C, 1950, NY TIMES 0430, pE7 1950, NY TIMES 0507, P151 1950, NY TIMES 0516, P14 DUFFUS RL, 1950, NY TIMES BOOK R 0730, P1 DUFFUS RL, 1950, NY TIMES BOOK R 0730, P17 LATTIMORE O, 1950, ORDEAL SLANDER 1950, TIME 0417 1950, WASHINGTON POST 0304, P10 LIPPMAN W, 1950, WASHINGTON POST 0330, P11 1950, WASHINGTON POST 0402, pM6 1950, WASHINGTON POST 0402, pM1 1950, WASHINGTON POST 0407, P21 FRIENDLY A, 1950, WASHINGTON POST 0409, pM1 ANDREWS M, 1950, WASHINGTON POST 0430, pM1 HAMMELMAN HA, 1947, MO L REV, V10, P32, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-2230.1947.tb00035.x BUDENZ LF, 1947, THIS IS MY STORY LATTIMORE O, 1945, CHINA MONTHLY DEC, V6, P15 KOHLBERG A, 1945, CHINA MONTHLY OCT, V6, P10 KOHLBERG A, 1945, CHINA MONTHLY OCT, V6, P26 EASTMAN M, 1945, READERS DIG, V46, P13 Lattimore Owen, 1940, INNER ASIAN FRONTIER NR 134 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD NOV PY 2011 VL 58 IS 4 BP 593 EP 614 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.4.593 PG 22 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 849MO UT WOS:000297129800005 ER PT J AU Kreager, DA Lyons, CJ Hays, ZR AF Kreager, Derek A. Lyons, Christopher J. Hays, Zachary R. TI Urban Revitalization and Seattle Crime, 1982-2000 SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE gentrification; revitalization; crime; communities; neighborhoods ID NEW-YORK-CITY; COLLECTIVE EFFICACY; VIOLENT CRIME; SPATIAL DYNAMICS; POSTINDUSTRIAL CITY; GENTRIFICATION; NEIGHBORHOODS; DELINQUENCY; AREAS; ECOLOGY AB This study examines the relationship between crime and processes of urban revitalization, or gentrification. Drawing on recent urban demography research, we hypothesize that gentrification progressed rapidly in many American cities over the last decade of the twentieth century, and that these changes had implications for area crime rates. Criminological theories hold competing hypotheses for the connections between gentrification and crime, and quantitative studies of this link remain infrequent and limited. Using two measures of gentrification and longitudinal tract-level demographic and crime data for the city of Seattle, we find that many of Seattle's downtown tracts underwent rapid revitalization during the 1990s, and that these areas (1) saw reductions in crime relative to similar tracts that did not gentrify, and (2) were areas with higher-than-average crime at the beginning of the decade. Moreover, using a within-tract longitudinal design, we find that yearly housing investments in the 1980s showed a modest positive association with crime change, while yearly investments in the 1990s showed the opposite pattern. Our findings suggest a curvilinear gentrification-crime relationship, whereby gentrification in its earlier stages is associated with small increases in crime, but gentrification in its more consolidated form is associated with modest crime declines. Implications of these results for criminological theory, urban development, and broader crime patterns are discussed. C1 [Kreager, Derek A.] Penn State Univ, Dept Sociol, University Pk, PA 16802 USA. [Lyons, Christopher J.] Univ New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA. [Hays, Zachary R.] Washington State Univ, Pullman, WA 99164 USA. RP Kreager, DA (reprint author), Penn State Univ, Dept Sociol, 211 Oswald Tower, University Pk, PA 16802 USA EM dkreager@psu.edu CR *US BUR CENS, 2011, DEC CENS *FFIEC, 2011, HOM MORTG DISCL ACT *BUR JUST STAT, 2011, HOM TRENDS US *FBI, 2011, UN CRIM REP Hipp JR, 2010, SOC PROBL, V57, P205, DOI 10.1525/sp.2010.57.2.205 Desena J, 2009, GENTRIFICATION INEQU Beckett K, 2008, THEOR CRIMINOL, V12, P5, DOI 10.1177/1362480607085792 Pattillo Mary, 2007, BLACK BLOCK POLITICS Zimring F.E., 2007, GREAT AM CRIME DECLI Van Wilsem J, 2006, SOC PROBL, V53, P226, DOI 10.1525/sp.2006.53.2.226 Newman K, 2006, URBAN STUD, V43, P23, DOI 10.1080/00420980500388710 Martinez Jr. Ramiro, 2006, IMMIGRATION CRIME RA, P1 Sampson R. J, 2006, The New York Times Sampson RJ, 2005, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V95, P224, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.2004.037705 BIRCH EL, 2005, WHO LIVES DOWNTOWN Browning CR, 2004, SOC FORCES, V83, P503, DOI 10.1353/sof.2005.0006 Newman K, 2004, ENVIRON PLANN A, V36, P1151, DOI 10.1068/a36229 Wyly EK, 2004, ENVIRON PLANN A, V36, P1215, DOI 10.1068/a3610 Weisburd D, 2004, CRIMINOLOGY, V42, P283, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2004.tb00521.x Halaby CN, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P507, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.30.012703.110629 Ley D, 2003, URBAN STUD, V40, P2527, DOI 10.1080/0042098032000136192 Kubrin CE, 2003, SOCIOL QUART, V44, P329, DOI 10.1525/tsq.2003.44.3.329 Hackworth J, 2002, URBAN AFF REV, V37, P815, DOI 10.1177/107874037006003 Sampson RJ, 2002, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V28, P443, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.28.110601.141114 Wooldridge Jeffrey M., 2002, ECONOMETRIC ANAL CRO Lloyd R, 2002, J URBAN AFF, V24, P517, DOI 10.1111/1467-9906.00141 LECAT P, 2002, SEATTLE POST IN 0917, pA1 Morenoff JD, 2001, CRIMINOLOGY, V39, P517, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2001.tb00932.x Lauritsen JL, 2001, J QUANT CRIMINOL, V17, P3, DOI 10.1023/A:1007574114380 Hackworth J, 2001, TIJDSCHR ECON SOC GE, V92, P464, DOI 10.1111/1467-9663.00172 Osgood DW, 2000, J QUANT CRIMINOL, V16, P21, DOI 10.1023/A:1007521427059 ANSELIN L, 2000, CRIMINAL JUSTICE 200, V4, P213 Blumstein A., 2000, CRIME DROP AM Atkinson R., 2000, J HOUS BUILT ENVIRON, V15, P307, DOI 10.1023/A:1010128901782 Smith N, 1999, INT J URBAN REGIONAL, V23, P638, DOI 10.1111/1468-2427.00220 Sampson RJ, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P603, DOI 10.1086/210356 Sampson RJ, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P633, DOI 10.2307/2657367 Parker KF, 1999, CRIMINOLOGY, V37, P447, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.1999.tb00493.x Wyly EK, 1999, HOUS POLICY DEBATE, V10, P711 Sampson R., 1999, URBAN PROBLEMS COMMU, P241 Akers Ronald L, 1998, SOCIAL LEARNING SOCI Bellair PE, 1997, CRIMINOLOGY, V35, P677, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.1997.tb01235.x Morenoff JD, 1997, SOC FORCES, V76, P31, DOI 10.2307/2580317 Sampson RJ, 1997, SCIENCE, V277, P918, DOI 10.1126/science.277.5328.918 Krivo LJ, 1996, SOC FORCES, V75, P619, DOI 10.2307/2580416 Hammel DJ, 1996, URBAN GEOGR, V17, P248 Sampson R., 1995, CRIME INEQUALITY, P37 ALLISON PD, 1994, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V23, P174, DOI 10.1177/0049124194023002002 FIREBAUGH G, 1994, AM SOCIOL REV, V59, P631, DOI 10.2307/2096441 BOURNE LS, 1993, URBAN STUD, V30, P183, DOI 10.1080/00420989320080111 BOURNE LS, 1993, URBAN GEOGR, V14, P95 SPAIN D, 1992, J URBAN AFF, V14, P125, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9906.1992.tb00281.x MASSEY DS, 1990, AM J SOCIOL, V96, P329, DOI 10.1086/229532 Allison PD, 1990, SOCIOL METHODOL, V20, P93, DOI 10.2307/271083 ALLISON PD, 1990, STREETWISE RACE CLAS BOURNE LS, 1989, CAN GEOGR-GEOGR CAN, V33, P312, DOI 10.1111/j.1541-0064.1989.tb00918.x COVINGTON J, 1989, URBAN AFF REV, V25, P142 BURSIK RJ, 1988, CRIMINOLOGY, V26, P519, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.1988.tb00854.x TAYLOR RB, 1988, CRIMINOLOGY, V26, P553, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.1988.tb00855.x COLEMAN JS, 1988, AM J SOCIOL, V94, pS95, DOI 10.1086/228943 Anselin L., 1988, SPATIAL ECONOMETRICS Taylor R. B, 1988, HUMAN TERRITORIAL FU NELSON KP, 1988, GENTRIFICATION DISTR Wilson W. J., 1987, TRULY DISADVANTAGED HEITGERD JL, 1987, AM J SOCIOL, V92, P775, DOI 10.1086/228582 MCDONALD SC, 1986, CRIME JUSTICE, V8, P163, DOI 10.1086/449122 BURSIK RJ, 1986, COMMUNITIES CRIME, P35 BEAUREGARD R, 1986, GENTRIFICATION CITY, P35 Berry B. J. L, 1985, NEW URBAN REALITY, P69 BURSIK RJ, 1984, SOC FORCES, V63, P393, DOI 10.2307/2579053 Zukin S., 1982, LOFT LIVING CULTURE BLAU JR, 1982, AM SOCIOL REV, V47, P114, DOI 10.2307/2095046 BURSIK RJ, 1982, AM J SOCIOL, V88, P24 SIMPSON CR, 1981, SOHO ARTIST CITY LEY D, 1980, ANN ASSOC AM GEOGR, V70, P238, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8306.1980.tb01310.x COHEN LE, 1979, AM SOCIOL REV, V44, P588, DOI 10.2307/2094589 LIPTON SG, 1977, PLANNING, V43, P136 KASARDA JD, 1974, AM SOCIOL REV, V39, P328, DOI 10.2307/2094293 Shaw C. R., 1942, JUVENILE DELINQUENCY McKay Henry D., 1931, REPORT CAUSES CRIME, VII PARK RE, 1921, INTRO SCI SOC NR 81 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD NOV PY 2011 VL 58 IS 4 BP 615 EP 639 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.4.615 PG 25 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 849MO UT WOS:000297129800006 ER PT J AU Cech, E Rubineau, B Silbey, S Seron, C AF Cech, Erin Rubineau, Brian Silbey, Susan Seron, Caroll TI Professional Role Confidence and Gendered Persistence in Engineering SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE professional role confidence; expertise confidence; career-fit confidence; gendered persistence in science and engineering ID OCCUPATIONAL SEX SEGREGATION; SELF-ESTEEM; WOMEN; SCIENCE; MATHEMATICS; ACHIEVEMENT; IDENTITY; SOCIALIZATION; ASPIRATIONS; PERFORMANCE AB Social psychological research on gendered persistence in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) professions is dominated by two explanations: women leave because they perceive their family plans to be at odds with demands of STEM careers, and women leave due to low self-assessment of their skills in STEM's intellectual tasks, net of their performance. This study uses original panel data to examine behavioral and intentional persistence among students who enter an engineering major in college. Surprisingly, family plans do not contribute to women's attrition during college but are negatively associated with men's intentions to pursue an engineering career. Additionally, math self-assessment does not predict behavioral or intentional persistence once students enroll in a STEM major. This study introduces professional role confidence-individuals' confidence in their ability to successfully fulfill the roles, competencies, and identity features of a profession-and argues that women's lack of this confidence, compared to men, reduces their likelihood of remaining in engineering majors and careers. We find that professional role confidence predicts behavioral and intentional persistence, and that women's relative lack of this confidence contributes to their attrition. C1 [Cech, Erin] Stanford Univ, Michelle R Clayman Inst Gender Res, Stanford, CA 94305 USA. [Rubineau, Brian] Cornell Univ, Sch Ind & Labor Relat, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA. [Silbey, Susan] MIT, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA. [Seron, Caroll] Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Criminol Law & Soc, Irvine, CA 92717 USA. [Seron, Caroll] Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Sociol, Irvine, CA 92717 USA. [Seron, Caroll] Univ Calif Irvine, Sch Law, Irvine, CA 92717 USA. RP Cech, E (reprint author), Stanford Univ, Michelle R Clayman Inst Gender Res, Serra House,589 Capistrano Way, Stanford, CA 94305 USA EM ecech@stanford.edu CR Ceci SJ, 2011, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V108, P3157, DOI 10.1073/pnas.1014871108 SERON C, 2011, GENDERED PROCESS PRO Turco CJ, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P894, DOI 10.1177/0003122410388491 Gerson K., 2010, UNFINISHED REVOLUTIO OWENS TJ, 2010, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V36, P1 Kellogg KC, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P657 Ma YY, 2009, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V52, P211, DOI 10.1525/sop.2009.52.2.211 Ridgeway CL, 2009, GENDER SOC, V23, P145, DOI 10.1177/0891243208330313 Sauder M, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P63 Charles M, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P924 *NAT SCI FDN, 2009, 09305 NSF DIV SCI RE *I ED SCI, 2009, DIG ED STAT SERON C, 2009, ENG STUDIES, V1, P107 Faulkner W, 2009, ENG STUD, V1, P169, DOI 10.1080/19378620903225059 LICHTENSTEIN G, 2009, J ENG EDUC, V98, P224 ROBINSON C, 2009, MULTIPLE LINEAR REGR, V35, P6 Watt H. G., 2008, GENDER OCCUPATIONAL, P87, DOI 10.1037/11706-003 BOULIS AK, 2008, CHANGING FACE MED WO MA X, 2008, GENDER OCCUPATIONAL, P55, DOI 10.1037/11706-002 FROME PM, 2008, GENDER OCCUPATIONAL, P195, DOI DOI 10.1037/11706-007 RUBINEAU B, 2008, 2008 ANN M AM SOC AS Sullivan W. M., 2007, ED LAWYERS PREPARATI RUBINEAU B, 2007, ACAD MANAGEMENT BEST CECH EA, 2007, GENDER ENG STRATEGIE, P33 FROME PM, 2006, ED RES EVALUATION, V12, P359, DOI DOI 10.1080/13803610600765786 Schleef Debra, 2006, MANAGING ELITES PROF BURGE SW, 2006, THESIS FLORIDA STATE Burke PJ, 2004, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V67, P5 Correll SJ, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P93 Miller GE, 2004, GENDER WORK ORGAN, V11, P47, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0432.2004.00220.x Reskin BF, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P1, DOI 10.2307/3088900 Xie Yu, 2003, WOMEN SCI Cast AD, 2002, SOC FORCES, V80, P1041, DOI 10.1353/sof.2002.0003 Eglash Ron, 2002, SOCIAL TEXT, V20, P49, DOI 10.1215/01642472-20-2_71-49 Correll SJ, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P1691, DOI 10.1086/321299 Schoon I, 2001, INT J BEHAV DEV, V25, P124 Faulkner W, 2000, SOC STUD SCI, V30, P759, DOI 10.1177/030631200030005005 Howard JA, 2000, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V26, P367, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.26.1.367 Ibarra H, 1999, ADMIN SCI QUART, V44, P764, DOI 10.2307/2667055 Dryburgh H, 1999, GENDER SOC, V13, P664, DOI 10.1177/089124399013005006 Cahill SE, 1999, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V62, P101, DOI 10.2307/2695852 Spencer SJ, 1999, J EXP SOC PSYCHOL, V35, P4, DOI 10.1006/jesp.1998.1373 EPSTEIN CF, 1999, PART TIME PARADOX Leslie LL, 1998, J HIGH EDUC, V69, P239, DOI 10.2307/2649188 Farmer HS, 1997, J CAREER ASSESSMENT, V5, P355, DOI 10.1177/106907279700500401 Steele CM, 1997, AM PSYCHOL, V52, P613, DOI 10.1037//0003-066X.52.6.613 Ridgeway CL, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P218, DOI 10.2307/2657301 Frehill LM, 1997, SOCIOL QUART, V38, P225, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1997.tb00475.x Cerulo KA, 1997, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V23, P385, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.385 Seymour E., 1997, TALKING LEAVING WHY Seegers G, 1996, J RES MATH EDUC, V27, P215, DOI 10.2307/749601 Sandler B. R., 1996, CHILLY CLASSROOM CLI Seron Carroll, 1996, BUSINESS PRACTICING ROSENBERG M, 1995, AM SOCIOL REV, V60, P141, DOI 10.2307/2096350 ECCLES JS, 1994, PSYCHOL WOMEN QUART, V18, P585, DOI 10.1111/j.1471-6402.1994.tb01049.x KILBOURNE BS, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V100, P689, DOI 10.1086/230578 PRESSER HB, 1994, AM SOCIOL REV, V59, P348, DOI 10.2307/2095938 TRICE HM, 1993, OCCUPATIONAL SUBCULT McIlwee J. S., 1992, WOMEN ENG GENDER POW Granfield R, 1992, MAKING ELITE LAWYERS Haas J, 1991, BECOMING DOCTORS ADO HYDE JS, 1990, PSYCHOL WOMEN QUART, V14, P299, DOI 10.1111/j.1471-6402.1990.tb00022.x Jacobs J. A., 1989, REVOLVING DOORS SEX WARE NC, 1988, AM EDUC RES J, V25, P593, DOI 10.3102/00028312025004593 FEATHER NT, 1988, J EDUC PSYCHOL, V80, P381, DOI 10.1037//0022-0663.80.3.381 FIORENTINE R, 1988, SEX ROLES, V18, P143, DOI 10.1007/BF00287785 ECCLES JS, 1987, PSYCHOL WOMEN QUART, V11, P135, DOI 10.1111/j.1471-6402.1987.tb00781.x FIORENTINE R, 1987, AM J SOCIOL, V92, P1118, DOI 10.1086/228629 ECCLES J, 1984, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V46, P26 ENGLAND P, 1984, SOC FORCES, V62, P726, DOI 10.2307/2578708 BETZ NE, 1983, J VOCAT BEHAV, V23, P329, DOI 10.1016/0001-8791(83)90046-5 DIMAGGIO P, 1983, AM SOCIOL REV, V48, P148 MARKUS H, 1982, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V42, P38, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.42.1.38 MERTON RK, 1982, SOCIAL RES PRACTICIN LIGHT D, 1979, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V20, P310, DOI 10.2307/2955407 Hughes E. C, 1971, SOCIOLOGICAL EYE SEL Merton R. K., 1968, SOCIAL THEORY SOCIAL Becker G.S., 1964, HUMAN CAPITAL THEORE Becker HS, 1961, BOYS WHITE STUDENT C Reeder G., 1957, STUDENT PHYSICIAN IN HUNTINGTON MJ, 1957, STUDENT PHYSICIAN IN, P179 Cooley C. H., 1902, HUMAN NATURE SOCIAL ROSENTHAL L, SEX ROLES IN PRESS NR 83 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD OCT PY 2011 VL 76 IS 5 BP 641 EP 666 DI 10.1177/0003122411420815 PG 26 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 826EO UT WOS:000295334500001 ER PT J AU Castilla, EJ AF Castilla, Emilio J. TI Bringing Managers Back In: Managerial Influences on Workplace Inequality SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE performance; careers; social networks; homophily; stratification; organizations; employment ID GENDER WAGE GAP; SOCIAL NETWORKS; RELATIONAL DEMOGRAPHY; PERFORMANCE-APPRAISAL; ASCRIPTIVE INEQUALITY; ORGANIZATIONAL POWER; FEMALE MANAGERS; SEX-DIFFERENCES; UNEQUAL ACCESS; CALL CENTER AB While great progress has been made in documenting that organizational practices affect workplace inequality, little is known about how managers in particular may shape the careers of the employees below them. Using unique longitudinal personnel data on managers and their subordinates, this study identifies and tests for evidence of three distinct mechanisms by which managers potentially influence the assessment of employee performance in the workplace: (1) social network influence between employees' current and former managers; (2) manager-manager (horizontal) homophily; and (3) manager-employee (vertical) homophily. I find evidence of the independent effects of all three mechanisms of managerial influence on the outcome of disagreement in the performance evaluation ratings of the same worker between former and current managers. In particular, my results stress that both managerial network influence and horizontal homophily affect the process of employee performance assessments, over and above the well-studied vertical homophily mechanism. I conclude by discussing the theoretical implications of these findings for future research regarding the interactional aspects of workplace inequality within contemporary organizations. C1 MIT, Alfred P Sloan Sch Management, Cambridge, MA 02142 USA. RP Castilla, EJ (reprint author), MIT, Alfred P Sloan Sch Management, 100 Main St,Room E62-332, Cambridge, MA 02142 USA EM ecastilla@mit.edu CR Maas VS, 2011, J BUS ETHICS, V101, P667, DOI 10.1007/s10551-011-0763-7 Briscoe F, 2011, AM SOCIOL REV, V76, P291, DOI 10.1177/0003122411401250 Maume DJ, 2011, SOC SCI RES, V40, P287, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2010.05.001 Cappelli Peter, 2011 Castilla EJ, 2010, ADMIN SCI QUART, V55, P543 Turco CJ, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P894, DOI 10.1177/0003122410388491 Wimmer A, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V116, P583, DOI 10.1086/653658 Huffman ML, 2010, ADMIN SCI QUART, V55, P255 Azoulay P, 2010, Q J ECON, V125, P549 Stainback K, 2010, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V36, P225, DOI 10.1146/annurev-soc-070308-120014 Stainback K, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P800 Dencker JC, 2009, ADMIN SCI QUART, V54, P453 Kalev A, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P1591 Gorman EH, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P1428 Dobbin F, 2009, INVENTING EQUAL OPPORTUNITY, P1 Fernandez RM, 2008, SOC SCI RES, V37, P1061, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2007.10.003 Manning A, 2008, ECON J, V118, P983, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0297.2008.02158.x Dencker JC, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P455 Castilla EJ, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P1479, DOI 10.1086/588738 Noe R. A., 2008, HUMAN RESOURCE MANAG Dobbin Frank, 2008 Cohen PN, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P681 DiTomaso N, 2007, ADMIN SCI QUART, V52, P175 Castilla Emilio J, 2007, DYNAMIC ANAL SOCIAL Roberson L, 2007, ACAD MANAG ANN, V1, P617, DOI 10.1080/078559818 Yakubovich V, 2006, ORGAN SCI, V17, P710, DOI 10.1287/orsc.1060.0214 Kalev A, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P589 Joshi A, 2006, ACAD MANAGE J, V49, P459 Mckay PF, 2006, J APPL PSYCHOL, V91, P538, DOI 10.1037/0021-9010.91.3.538 Fernandez RM, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P42 Mouw T, 2006, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V32, P79, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.32.061604.123150 Long J. S., 2006, REGRESSION MODELS CA Loyd DL, 2006, RES MANAG GROUP TEAM, V8, P225, DOI 10.1016/S1534-0856(06)08011-X Roth Louise M., 2006, SELLING WOMEN SHORT Fernandez RM, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P859, DOI 10.1086/497257 Gorman EH, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P702 Beckman CM, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P678 Yakubovich V, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P408 Castilla EJ, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P1243 Heneman Robert L., 2005, MERIT PAY LINKING PA Rynes SL, 2005, ANNU REV PSYCHOL, V56, P571, DOI 10.1146/annurev.psych.56.091103.070254 Elliott JR, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P365 Winship C, 2004, NEGOTIATION J, V20, P297, DOI 10.1111/j.0748-4526.2004.00000.x Petersen T, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P852, DOI 10.1086/378536 Rossi P.H., 2004, EVALUATION SYSTEMATI Mouw T, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P868, DOI 10.2307/1519749 Roth PL, 2003, J APPL PSYCHOL, V88, P694, DOI 10.1037/0021-9010.88.4.694 Zuckerman EW, 2003, J ECON LIT, V41, P545, DOI 10.1257/002205103765762761 Hultin M, 2003, EUR SOCIOL REV, V19, P143, DOI 10.1093/esr/19.2.143 Reskin BF, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P1, DOI 10.2307/3088900 Salzinger Leslie, 2003, GENDERS PRODUCTION M Mathis Robert L., 2003, HUMAN RESOURCE MANAG Mouw T, 2002, SOC SCI RES, V31, P511, DOI 10.1016/S0049-089X(02)00020-0 Elvira MM, 2002, ORGAN SCI, V13, P601, DOI 10.1287/orsc.13.6.601.499 Elvira M, 2001, IND RELAT, V40, P571, DOI 10.1111/0019-8676.00226 Fernandez RM, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P273, DOI 10.1086/324009 McPherson M, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P415, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.27.1.415 Burt R.S., 2001, NETWORKS MARKETS, P30 Petersen T, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P763, DOI 10.1086/318961 Reskin BF, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P210, DOI 10.2307/2657438 Fernandez RM, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P1288, DOI 10.1086/210432 Reskin BF, 2000, CONTEMP SOCIOL, V29, P319, DOI 10.2307/2654387 Burt RS, 2000, RES ORGAN BEHAV, V22, P345, DOI 10.1016/S0191-3085(00)22009-1 Hultin M, 1999, ADMIN SCI QUART, V44, P453, DOI 10.2307/2666958 Cappelli Peter, 1999, NEW DEAL WORK Tsui A. S., 1999, DEMOGRAPHIC DIFFEREN Cohen LE, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P711, DOI 10.2307/2657335 Grusky DB, 1998, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P1187, DOI 10.1086/231351 Brewer M. B., 1998, HDB SOCIAL PSYCHOL, P554 Fiske S. T., 1998, HDB SOCIAL PSYCHOL, V2, P357 Lazear E.P., 1998, PERSONNEL EC MANAGER Biernat M, 1997, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V72, P544, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.72.3.544 BURT RS, 1995, RATION SOC, V7, P255, DOI 10.1177/1043463195007003003 ELY RJ, 1995, ACAD MANAGE J, V38, P589, DOI 10.2307/256740 Granovetter M, 1995, GETTING JOB STUDY CO Klayman J, 1995, PSYCHOL LEARN MOTIV, V32, P385, DOI 10.1016/S0079-7421(08)60315-1 MAURER TJ, 1994, ORGAN BEHAV HUM DEC, V60, P231, DOI 10.1006/obhd.1994.1082 Cialdini Robert B., 1994, Influence: How and Why People Agree to Things IBARRA H, 1993, ADMIN SCI QUART, V38, P277, DOI 10.2307/2393414 TSUI AS, 1992, ADMIN SCI QUART, V37, P549, DOI 10.2307/2393472 IBARRA H, 1992, ADMIN SCI QUART, V37, P422, DOI 10.2307/2393451 Burt R.S., 1992, STRUCTURAL HOLES SOC Higgins E. Tory, 1992, J LANG SOC PSYCHOL, V11, P107 Turner John C., 1991, SOCIAL INFLUENCE MOORE G, 1990, AM SOCIOL REV, V55, P726, DOI 10.2307/2095868 EISENHARDT KM, 1990, ADMIN SCI QUART, V35, P504, DOI 10.2307/2393315 PERDUE CW, 1990, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V59, P475, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.59.3.475 BARON JN, 1990, AM SOCIOL REV, V55, P155, DOI 10.2307/2095624 JONES SRG, 1990, AM SOCIOL REV, V55, P176, DOI 10.2307/2095625 BRIDGES WP, 1989, AM J SOCIOL, V95, P616, DOI 10.1086/229328 PULAKOS ED, 1989, J APPL PSYCHOL, V74, P770, DOI 10.1037//0021-9010.74.5.770 TSUI AS, 1989, ACAD MANAGE J, V32, P402, DOI 10.2307/256368 RESKIN BF, 1988, SOC PROBL, V35, P536, DOI 10.1525/sp.1988.35.5.03a00050 MARSDEN PV, 1988, SOC NETWORKS, V10, P57, DOI 10.1016/0378-8733(88)90010-X WHARTON AS, 1987, AM SOCIOL REV, V52, P574, DOI 10.2307/2095595 TAJFEL H, 1982, ANNU REV PSYCHOL, V33, P1, DOI 10.1146/annurev.ps.33.020182.000245 Tajfel H., 1982, SOCIAL IDENTITY INTE BREWER MB, 1979, PSYCHOL BULL, V86, P307, DOI 10.1037/0033-2909.86.2.307 Burawoy M., 1979, MANUFACTURING CONSEN GRANOVET.MS, 1973, AM J SOCIOL, V78, P1360, DOI 10.1086/225469 ROY DF, 1959, HUM ORGAN, V18, P158 Goffman E, 1959, PRESENTATION SELF EV Roy DF, 1953, AM SOCIOL REV, V18, P507, DOI 10.2307/2087434 NR 103 TC 1 Z9 1 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD OCT PY 2011 VL 76 IS 5 BP 667 EP 694 DI 10.1177/0003122411420814 PG 28 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 826EO UT WOS:000295334500002 ER PT J AU Marx, M AF Marx, Matt TI The Firm Strikes Back: Non-compete Agreements and the Mobility of Technical Professionals SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE internal labor markets; externalized labor markets; mobility; employment contracts ID SILICON VALLEY; INEQUALITY; EMPLOYMENT; WORKERS; ARRANGEMENTS; INVESTMENT; TRENDS AB This study explores how firms shape labor markets and career paths using employee non-compete agreements. The sociology of work has overlooked non-competes, but data indicate that nearly half of technical professionals in the United States are asked to sign such employment contracts. Fearing loss of investments in talent and trade secrets, firms use non-competes to "strike back" against technical professionals' increased mobility following the decline of internal labor markets. In-depth interviews with 52 randomly sampled patent holders in a single industry, coupled with a survey of 1,029 engineers across a variety of industries, reveal that ex-employees subject to non-competes are more likely to take career detours-that is, they involuntarily leave their technical field to avoid a potential lawsuit. Moreover, firms strategically manage the process of getting workers to sign such contracts, waiting for workers' bargaining position to weaken. These findings inform our understanding of the social organization of work in the knowledge economy. C1 MIT, Alfred P Sloan Sch Management, Cambridge, MA 02142 USA. RP Marx, M (reprint author), MIT, Alfred P Sloan Sch Management, 100 Main St,E62-478, Cambridge, MA 02142 USA EM mmarx@mit.edu CR Garmaise MJ, 2011, J LAW ECON ORGAN, V27, P376, DOI 10.1093/jleo/ewp033 Bidwell M, 2010, ORGAN SCI, V21, P1034, DOI 10.1287/orsc.1090.0492 MARX M, 2010, E SOC SOC ANN M MARC MARX M, 2010, NAT BUR EC RES SUMM Marx M, 2009, MANAGE SCI, V55, P875, DOI 10.1287/mnsc.1080.0985 Kalleberg AL, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P1 Sorensen JB, 2007, ADMIN SCI QUART, V52, P387 Mishel L., 2007, STATE WORKING AM 200 DiPrete TA, 2007, AM BEHAV SCI, V50, P603, DOI 10.1177/0002764206295009 Fallick B, 2006, REV ECON STAT, V88, P472, DOI 10.1162/rest.88.3.472 MCMILLAN R, 2006, COMPUTERWORLD 0120 Barley S., 2004, GURUS HIRED GUNS WAR OSTERMAN P, 2004, WORKFORCE INTERMEDIA, P155 Kalleberg AL, 2003, SOC SCI RES, V32, P525, DOI 10.1016/S0049-089X(03)00013-9 Stuart TE, 2003, ADMIN SCI QUART, V48, P175, DOI 10.2307/3556656 HYDE ALAN, 2003, WORKING SILICON VALL ZUCKERMAN, 2003, SOCIOLOGY, V108, P1018 MOTTA M, 2002, 3615 CTR EC POL RES Kaplan SN, 2001, AM ECON REV, V91, P426, DOI 10.1257/aer.91.2.426 Arundel A, 2001, RES POLICY, V30, P611, DOI 10.1016/S0048-7333(00)00100-1 Cohen W., 2000, W7552 NAT BUR EC RES Gilson RJ, 1999, NEW YORK U LAW REV, V74, P575 Cappelli Peter, 1999, NEW DEAL WORK MANAGI Morris M, 1999, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V25, P623, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.25.1.623 Dworkin TM, 1998, AM BUS LAW J, V36, P151 Sennett R, 1998, CORROSION CHARACTER KOH JL, 1998, AM U L REV, V48, P271 SUMMERS CW, 1997, COMP LAB LJ, V18, P503 Fallick BC, 1996, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V50, P5, DOI 10.2307/2524386 Sorensen AB, 1996, AM J SOCIOL, V101, P1333, DOI 10.1086/230825 Arthur MB, 1996, BOUNDARYLESS CAREER Saxenian AnnaLee, 1996, BOUNDARYLESS CAREER, P23 MALSBERGER B, 1996, COVENANTS NOT COMPET LERNER J, 1995, J LAW ECON, V38, P463, DOI 10.1086/467339 Weiss RS, 1994, LEARNING STRANGERS A Saxenian A, 1994, REGIONAL ADVANTAGE C DECKER K, 1993, COVENANTS NOT COMPET FRIEDMAN DD, 1991, J ECON PERSPECT, V5, P61 Strauss A., 1990, BASICS QUALITATIVE R EISENHARDT KM, 1989, ACAD MANAGE REV, V14, P532, DOI 10.2307/258557 FLIGSTEIN N, 1988, SOCIOL QUART, V29, P5, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1988.tb01240.x PFEFFER J, 1988, RES ORGAN BEHAV, V10, P257 Levin R.C., 1987, BROOKINGS PAPERS EC, V18, P783 VALIULIS A, 1985, COVENANTS NOT COMPET FERNANDEZ R, 1985, THESIS U CHICAGO GREENHALGH L, 1984, ACAD MANAGE REV, V9, P438, DOI 10.2307/258284 ROSEN S, 1983, J LABOR ECON, V1, P43, DOI 10.1086/298003 COHEN J, 1968, PSYCHOL BULL, V70, P213, DOI 10.1037/h0026256 HOLEN AS, 1965, J POLIT ECON, V73, P492, DOI 10.1086/259072 BECKER GS, 1962, J POLIT ECON, V70, P9, DOI 10.1086/258724 NR 50 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD OCT PY 2011 VL 76 IS 5 BP 695 EP 712 DI 10.1177/0003122411414822 PG 18 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 826EO UT WOS:000295334500003 ER PT J AU Wodtke, GT Harding, DJ Elwert, F AF Wodtke, Geoffrey T. Harding, David J. Elwert, Felix TI Neighborhood Effects in Temporal Perspective: The Impact of Long-Term Exposure to Concentrated Disadvantage on High School Graduation SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE neighborhoods; education; causality; marginal structural models; inverse probability of treatment weighting ID MARGINAL STRUCTURAL MODELS; RESIDENTIAL-MOBILITY; CAUSAL INFERENCE; OPPORTUNITY EXPERIMENT; POOR NEIGHBORHOODS; URBAN POVERTY; INEQUALITY; RACE; DETERMINANTS; OUTCOMES AB Theory suggests that neighborhood effects depend not only on where individuals live today, but also on where they lived in the past. Previous research, however, usually measures neighborhood context only once and does not account for length of residence, thereby understating the detrimental effects of long-term neighborhood disadvantage. This study investigates effects of duration of exposure to disadvantaged neighborhoods on high school graduation. It follows 4,154 children in the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, measuring neighborhood context once per year from age 1 to 17. The analysis overcomes the problem of dynamic neighborhood selection by adapting novel methods of causal inference for time-varying treatments. In contrast to previous analyses, these methods do not "control away" the effect of neighborhood context operating indirectly through time-varying characteristics of the family; thus, they capture the full impact of a lifetime of neighborhood disadvantage. We find that sustained exposure to disadvantaged neighborhoods has a severe impact on high school graduation that is considerably larger than effects reported in prior research. We estimate that growing up in the most (compared to the least) disadvantaged quintile of neighborhoods reduces the probability of graduation from 96 to 76 percent for black children, and from 95 to 87 percent for nonblack children. C1 [Wodtke, Geoffrey T.; Harding, David J.] Univ Michigan, Ctr Populat Studies, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 USA. [Wodtke, Geoffrey T.; Harding, David J.] Univ Michigan, Dept Sociol, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 USA. [Harding, David J.] Univ Michigan, Ford Sch Publ Policy, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 USA. [Harding, David J.] Univ Michigan, Survey Res Ctr, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 USA. [Elwert, Felix] Univ Wisconsin Madison, Dept Sociol, Madison, WI USA. RP Wodtke, GT (reprint author), Univ Michigan, Ctr Populat Studies, 426 Thompson St, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 USA EM wodtke@umich.edu CR Sharkey P, 2011, AM J SOCIOL, V116, P1934, DOI 10.1086/660009 Crowder K, 2011, SOC SCI RES, V40, P87, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2010.04.013 Sharkey P, 2010, CRIMINOLOGY, V48, P639 Clark NA, 2010, ENVIRON HEALTH PERSP, V118, P284, DOI 10.1289/ehp.0900916 South SJ, 2010, J MARRIAGE FAM, V72, P89, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2009.00685.x Rosenfeld L, 2010, J ASTHMA, V47, P66, DOI 10.3109/02770900903362676 Crowder K, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P1110 HARDING DJ, 2010, LIVING DRAMA COMMUNI Harding DJ, 2009, SOC FORCES, V88, P757 Halpern-Manners A, 2009, SOC SCI RES, V38, P397, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2008.11.002 Briggs XD, 2009, URBAN STUD, V46, P429, DOI 10.1177/0042098008099362 Wilson William J., 2009, MORE JUST RACE BEING Cole SR, 2008, AM J EPIDEMIOL, V168, P656, DOI 10.1093/aje/kwn164 Hong GL, 2008, J EDUC BEHAV STAT, V33, P333, DOI 10.3102/1076998607307355 Browning CR, 2008, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V49, P269 Sampson RJ, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P189, DOI 10.1086/589843 Clampet-Lundquist S, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P107 Ludwig J, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P144, DOI 10.1086/588741 Sampson RJ, 2008, DEMOGRAPHY, V45, P1, DOI 10.1353/dem.2008.0012 Iceland J, 2008, DEMOGRAPHY, V45, P79, DOI 10.1353/dem.2008.0009 Sampson RJ, 2008, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V105, P845, DOI 10.1073/pnas.0710189104 Timberlake JM, 2007, SOC PROBL, V54, P319, DOI 10.1525/sp.2007.54.3.319 Jackson MI, 2007, SOC SCI RES, V36, P590, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2007.02.002 Sampson RJ, 2006, CRIMINOLOGY, V44, P465, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2006.00055.x Moonie SA, 2006, J SCHOOL HEALTH, V76, P18, DOI 10.1111/j.1746-1561.2006.00062.x Schwartz Joel, 2006, Clin Occup Environ Med, V5, P837 Schulz AJ, 2005, ENVIRON HEALTH PERSP, V113, P1817, DOI 10.1289/ehp.7913 Browning CR, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P758 Ponce NA, 2005, AM J EPIDEMIOL, V162, P140, DOI 10.1093/aje/kwi173 Royston P., 2005, STATA J, V5, P1 Rumberger R. W., 2004, DROPOUTS AM CONFRONT, P131 Fernandez RM, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P545, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.29.010202.100034 MASSEY DS, 2004, BOIS REV, V1, P7 Barber JS, 2004, SOCIOL METHODOL, V34, P163, DOI 10.1111/j.0081-1750.2004.00151.x Harding DJ, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P676, DOI 10.1086/379217 Quillian L, 2003, POPUL RES POLICY REV, V22, P221, DOI 10.1023/A:1026077008571 Greenland S, 2003, EPIDEMIOLOGY, V14, P300, DOI 10.1097/00001648-200305000-00009 Kunz J, 2003, ECON LETT, V79, P231, DOI 10.1016/S0165-1765(02)00324-5 Turley RNL, 2003, SOC SCI RES, V32, P61 Charles CZ, 2003, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V29, P167, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.29.010202.100002 GeoLytics Inc., 2003, CENSUSCD NEIGHB CHAN Hernan MA, 2002, STAT MED, V21, P1689, DOI 10.1002/sim.1144 Sampson RJ, 2002, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V28, P443, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.28.110601.141114 Little RJA, 2002, STAT ANAL MISSING DA Ludwig J, 2001, Q J ECON, V116, P655, DOI 10.1162/00335530151144122 Small ML, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P23, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.27.1.23 Sampson RJ, 2001, DOES IT TAKE A VILLAGE?, P3 Robins JM, 2000, EPIDEMIOLOGY, V11, P550, DOI 10.1097/00001648-200009000-00011 Ginther D, 2000, J HUM RESOUR, V35, P603, DOI 10.2307/146365 Leventhal T, 2000, PSYCHOL BULL, V126, P309, DOI 10.1037/0033-2909.126.2.309 Pearl J, 2000, CAUSALITY MODELS REA Robins JM, 1999, SYNTHESE, V121, P151, DOI 10.1023/A:1005285815569 Anderson E., 1999, CODE STREET DECENCY Halloran M. Elizabeth, 1999, STAT MODELS EPIDEMIO, P1 South SJ, 1998, J MARRIAGE FAM, V60, P866, DOI 10.2307/353630 Aaronson D, 1998, J HUM RESOUR, V33, P915, DOI 10.2307/146403 South SJ, 1998, POPUL RES POLICY REV, V17, P369, DOI 10.1023/A:1005917328257 South SJ, 1997, DEMOGRAPHY, V34, P525, DOI 10.2307/3038307 Ladd HF, 1997, AM ECON REV, V87, P272 South SJ, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P1040, DOI 10.1086/231039 Brooks-Gunn J., 1997, NEIGHBORHOOD POVERTY, V1 Aaronson D., 1997, NEIGHBORHOOD POVERTY, V2, P80 Wilson W.J., 1996, WORK DISAPPEARS WORL Pearl J, 1995, BIOMETRIKA, V82, P669, DOI 10.1093/biomet/82.4.669 Yinger John, 1995, CLOSED DOORS OPPORTU BROOKSGUNN J, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V99, P353, DOI 10.1086/230268 SOUTH SJ, 1993, SOC FORCES, V72, P147, DOI 10.2307/2580163 Denton Nancy A., 1993, AM APARTHEID SEGREGA EVANS WN, 1992, J POLIT ECON, V100, P966, DOI 10.1086/261848 ENSMINGER ME, 1992, SOCIOL EDUC, V65, P95, DOI 10.2307/2112677 CRANE J, 1991, URBAN UNDERCLASS, P299 Jencks C, 1990, INNER CITY POVERTY U, P111 CAIRNS RB, 1989, CHILD DEV, V60, P1437, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8624.1989.tb04015.x RUMBERGER RW, 1987, REV EDUC RES, V57, P101, DOI 10.3102/00346543057002101 SPEARE A, 1987, J MARRIAGE FAM, V49, P455, DOI 10.2307/352314 Rubin DB, 1987, MULTIPLE IMPUTATION Wilson W. J., 1987, TRULY DISADVANTAGED HOLLAND PW, 1986, J AM STAT ASSOC, V81, P945, DOI 10.2307/2289064 ROBINS J, 1986, MATH MODELLING, V7, P1393, DOI 10.1016/0270-0255(86)90088-6 RUBIN DB, 1974, J EDUC PSYCHOL, V66, P688, DOI 10.1037/h0037350 NR 80 TC 1 Z9 1 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD OCT PY 2011 VL 76 IS 5 BP 713 EP 736 DI 10.1177/0003122411420816 PG 24 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 826EO UT WOS:000295334500004 ER PT J AU Kreager, DA Haynie, DL AF Kreager, Derek A. Haynie, Dana L. TI Dangerous Liaisons? Dating and Drinking Diffusion in Adolescent Peer Networks SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE adolescence; substance use; networks; romantic relationships; dyads ID ROMANTIC RELATIONSHIPS; ALCOHOL-USE; SUBSTANCE USE; FRIENDSHIP NETWORKS; YOUNG ADOLESCENTS; SOCIAL DYNAMICS; WEAK TIES; GENDER; DELINQUENCY; SELECTION AB The onset and escalation of alcohol consumption and romantic relationships are hallmarks of adolescence. Yet only recently have these domains jointly been the focus of sociological inquiry. We extend this literature by connecting alcohol use, dating, and peers to understand the diffusion of drinking behavior in school-based friendship networks. Drawing on Granovetter's classic concept of weak ties, we argue that adolescent romantic partners are likely to be network bridges, or liaisons, connecting daters to new peer contexts that, in turn, promote changes in individual drinking behaviors and allow these behaviors to spread across peer networks. Using longitudinal data of 449 couples from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, we estimate Actor-Partner Interdependence Models and identify unique contributions of partners' drinking, friends' drinking, and friends-of-partners' drinking to daters' own future binge drinking and drinking frequency. Findings support the liaison hypothesis and suggest that friends-of-partners' drinking have net associations with adolescent drinking patterns. Moreover, the coefficient for friends-of-partners' drinking is larger than the coefficient for one's own peers and generally immune to prior selection. Our findings suggest that romantic relationships are important mechanisms for understanding the diffusion of emergent problem behaviors in adolescent peer networks. C1 [Kreager, Derek A.] Penn State Univ, Dept Sociol, University Pk, PA 16802 USA. [Haynie, Dana L.] Ohio State Univ, Columbus, OH 43210 USA. RP Kreager, DA (reprint author), Penn State Univ, Dept Sociol, 211 Oswald Tower, University Pk, PA 16802 USA EM dkreager@psu.edu CR Mercken L, 2010, SOC NETWORKS, V32, P72, DOI 10.1016/j.socnet.2009.02.005 Mercken L, 2009, SOC SCI MED, V69, P1506, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.08.003 Baller RD, 2009, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V50, P261 Akers R. L., 2009, SOCIAL LEARNING SOCI Johnston LD, 2009, University of Michigan News Service: Ann Arbor, MI McCarthy B, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P944 Staff J, 2008, J STUD ALCOHOL DRUGS, V69, P848 Christakis NA, 2008, NEW ENGL J MED, V358, P2249, DOI 10.1056/NEJMsa0706154 Felson RB, 2008, J RES CRIME DELINQ, V45, P119, DOI 10.1177/0022427807313704 Frank KA, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P1645, DOI 10.1086/587153 CONNOLLY J, 2008, INT SOC STUDY BEHAV, V32, P1 Poulin F, 2007, DEV PSYCHOL, V43, P1484, DOI 10.1037/0012-1649.43.6.1484 Henry DB, 2007, J EARLY ADOLESCENCE, V27, P346, DOI 10.1177/0272431607302005 Payne DC, 2007, J QUANT CRIMINOL, V23, P127, DOI 10.1007/s10940-006-9022-y Giordano PC, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P260 Kenny D.A., 2006, DYADIC DATA ANAL Ennett ST, 2006, J RES ADOLESCENCE, V16, P159, DOI 10.1111/j.1532-7795.2006.00127.x Giordano PC, 2006, PENN STATE UNIV FAM, P127 Montgomery MJ, 2005, J ADOLESCENT RES, V20, P346, DOI 10.1177/0743558404273118 Haynie DL, 2005, CRIMINOLOGY, V43, P177 Jaccard J, 2005, DEV PSYCHOL, V41, P135, DOI 10.1037/0012-1649.41.1.135 Royston P, 2005, STATA J, V5, P188 Bonomo YA, 2004, ADDICTION, V99, P1520, DOI 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2004.00846.x Burt RS, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P349, DOI 10.1086/421787 Kuttler AF, 2004, J ADOLESCENCE, V27, P395, DOI 10.1061/j.adolescence.2004.05.002 Bearman PS, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P44, DOI 10.1086/386272 Crosnoe R, 2004, SOC PROBL, V51, P288, DOI 10.1525/sp.2004.51.2.288 Raudenbush S.W., 2004, HLM 6 HIERARCHICAL L Connolly J, 2004, J RES ADOLESCENCE, V14, P185, DOI 10.1111/j.1532-7795.2004.01402003.x Valente Thomas W, 2004, Subst Use Misuse, V39, P1685, DOI 10.1081/LSUM-200033210 Brown B, 2004, HDB ADOLESCENT PSYCH, P363 Leonard KE, 2003, PSYCHOL ADDICT BEHAV, V17, P115, DOI 10.1037/0893-164X.17.2.115 Furman W, 2003, ADOLESCENT ROMANTIC REALTIONS AND SEXUAL BEHAVIOR: THEORY, RESEARCH, AND PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS, P3 Collins WAW, 2003, J RES ADOLESCENCE, V13, P1, DOI 10.1111/1532-7795.1301001 Hingson R, 2003, PEDIATRICS, V111, P34, DOI 10.1542/peds.111.1.34 FLORSHEIM P, 2003, ADOLESCENT ROMANTIC RICE RE, 2003, CONNECTIONS, V26, P32 Abel G, 2002, DRUG-EDUC PREV POLIC, V9, P325, DOI 10.1080/09687630210157636 Crosnoe R, 2002, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V43, P317, DOI 10.2307/3090207 Haynie DL, 2002, J QUANT CRIMINOL, V18, P99, DOI 10.1023/A:1015227414929 Haynie DL, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P1013, DOI 10.1086/320298 McPherson M, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P415, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.27.1.415 CHANTALA K, 2001, CONSTRUCTING WEIGHTS *NAT LONG STUD AD, 2001, NETW VAR COD GIORDANO PC, 2001, SOTSIOL ISSLED+, P111 Crosnoe R, 2000, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V63, P377, DOI 10.2307/2695847 Connolly J, 2000, CHILD DEV, V71, P1395, DOI 10.1111/1467-8624.00235 Windle M., 2000, APPL DEV SCI, V4, P98, DOI 10.1207/S1532480XADS0402_5 Sieving RE, 2000, J ADOLESCENT HEALTH, V26, P27, DOI 10.1016/S1054-139X(99)00056-7 Windle M, 1999, DEV PSYCHOPATHOL, V11, P823, DOI 10.1017/S0954579499002345 Schulenberg J, 1999, MERRILL PALMER QUART, V45, P108 Furman W., 1999, DEV ROMANTIC RELATIO MOODY J, 1999, THESIS U N CAROLINA Curran PJ, 1997, J CONSULT CLIN PSYCH, V65, P130, DOI 10.1037//0022-006X.65.1.130 Yamaguchi K, 1997, J MARRIAGE FAM, V59, P22, DOI 10.2307/353659 LAURSEN B, 1997, ROMANTIC RELATIONSHI, P3 Bauman KE, 1996, ADDICTION, V91, P185, DOI 10.1111/j.1360-0443.1996.tb03175.x CONNOLLY JA, 1994, J RES ADOLESCENCE, V4, P385, DOI 10.1207/s15327795jra0403_3 FURMAN W, 1994, PERS RELATIONSHIP, P168 YAMAGUCHI, 1993, SOC FORCES, V72, P505 FURMAN W, 1992, CHILD DEV, V63, P103, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8624.1992.tb03599.x HANSEN DJ, 1992, HDB SOCIAL DEV LIFES, P371 HAGAN J, 1991, AM SOCIOL REV, V56, P567, DOI 10.2307/2096080 Clark-Lempers Dania, 1991, J ADOLESCENT RES, V6, P296, DOI 10.1177/074355489163003 MACCOBY EE, 1990, AM PSYCHOL, V45, P513, DOI 10.1037//0003-066X.45.4.513 Gottfredson M. R., 1990, GEN THEORY CRIME Feldman S. Shirley, 1990, THRESHOLD DEV ADOLES, P171 JUSSIM L, 1989, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V52, P98, DOI 10.2307/2786910 NEWCOMB MD, 1989, AM PSYCHOL, V44, P242, DOI 10.1037//0003-066X.44.2.242 FISHER LA, 1988, J APPL SOC PSYCHOL, V18, P289, DOI 10.1111/j.1559-1816.1988.tb00018.x Granovetter Mark, 1983, SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY, P201, DOI DOI 10.2307/202051 FELD SL, 1981, AM J SOCIOL, V86, P1015, DOI 10.1086/227352 Bandura A, 1977, SOCIAL LEARNING THEO GRANOVET.MS, 1973, AM J SOCIOL, V78, P1360, DOI 10.1086/225469 KANDEL D, 1973, SCI MAGAZINE, V14, P1067 Hirschi T, 1969, CAUSES DELINQUENCY DUNPHY DC, 1963, SOCIOMETRY, V26, P230, DOI 10.2307/2785909 Sutherland E.H, 1947, PRINCIPLES CRIMINOLO Heider F, 1946, J PSYCHOL, V21, P107 NR 79 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD OCT PY 2011 VL 76 IS 5 BP 737 EP 763 DI 10.1177/0003122411416934 PG 27 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 826EO UT WOS:000295334500005 ER PT J AU Schaefer, DR Kornienko, O Fox, AM AF Schaefer, David R. Kornienko, Olga Fox, Andrew M. TI Misery Does Not Love Company: Network Selection Mechanisms and Depression Homophily SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE depression; health; homophily; social networks; adolescents ID ADOLESCENT FRIENDSHIP NETWORKS; SOCIAL EXCLUSION; STRUCTURAL HOLES; SYMPTOMS; CHILDREN; HEALTH; BEHAVIOR; MEDICATIONS; INTEGRATION; OTHERS AB Conventional wisdom holds that friends protect against depression through the social support they provide; however, depression likely has a role in structuring friendship networks. In particular, we investigate friend selection mechanisms responsible for similarity in depression among friends (i.e., homophily). Preference is one explanation, yet several correlates of depression make homophilous selection among depressed individuals unlikely. We propose two alternative mechanisms-avoidance and withdrawal-that can produce depression homophily in the absence of preference. These alternative mechanisms create homophily indirectly by limiting friendship partners available to depressed individuals. We test the preference, avoidance, and withdrawal mechanisms using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health and a dynamic network model. Results provide support for the withdrawal mechanism. These findings help explain how depression affects friend selection and have broader implications for understanding selection mechanisms responsible for network patterns such as homophily. C1 [Schaefer, David R.; Kornienko, Olga] Arizona State Univ, Sch Social & Family Dynam, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA. [Fox, Andrew M.] Arizona State Univ, Sch Criminol & Criminal Justice, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA. RP Schaefer, DR (reprint author), Arizona State Univ, Sch Social & Family Dynam, Box 873701, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA EM david.schaefer@asu.edu CR Raub W, 2011, J MATH SOCIOL, V35, P1, DOI 10.1080/0022250X.2010.532263 Haas SA, 2010, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V51, P424, DOI 10.1177/0022146510386791 Wimmer A, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V116, P583, DOI 10.1086/653658 Sijtsema JJ, 2010, SOC DEV, V19, P515, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9507.2009.00566.x Van Zalk MHW, 2010, DEV PSYCHOL, V46, P927, DOI 10.1037/a0019661 Rivera MT, 2010, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V36, P91, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.34.040507.134743 Snijders TAB, 2010, SOC NETWORKS, V32, P44, DOI 10.1016/j.socnet.2009.02.004 Steglich C, 2010, SOCIOL METHODOL, V40, P329, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9531.2010.01225.x Umberson D, 2010, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V36, P139, DOI 10.1146/annurev-soc-070308-120011 LUCAS JW, 2010, 2010 GROUP PROC C AT Falci C, 2009, SOC FORCES, V87, P2031 van Straaten I, 2009, PERS SOC PSYCHOL B, V35, P685, DOI 10.1177/0146167209332965 Rubin KH, 2009, ANNU REV PSYCHOL, V60, P141, DOI 10.1146/annurev.psych.60.110707.163642 Hedstrom P., 2009, OXFORD HDB ANAL SOCI, P3 Cornwell B, 2009, SOC NETWORKS, V31, P92, DOI 10.1016/j.socnet.2008.10.005 Snijders T.A.B., 2009, Manual for SIENA Version 3.2, Provisional Version SCHAEFER DR, 2009, ANN M AM SOC ASS SAN Chan A, 2009, SOC DEV, V18, P1, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9507.2008.00461.x Crosnoe R, 2008, SOC FORCES, V86, P1189 Jose PE, 2008, J YOUTH ADOLESCENCE, V37, P180, DOI 10.1007/s10964-006-9166-y Rudolph K, 2008, HDB DEPRESSION CHILD, P79 AVENEVOLI S, 2008, EPIDEMIOLOGY DEPRESS Rockhill CM, 2007, J ABNORM CHILD PSYCH, V35, P429, DOI 10.1007/s10802-007-9101-z Pescosolido BA, 2007, PSYCHIAT SERV, V58, P613, DOI 10.1176/appi.ps.58.5.613 Prinstein MJ, 2007, J CLIN CHILD ADOLESC, V36, P159 Martin JK, 2007, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V48, P50 Maner JK, 2007, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V92, P42, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.92.1.42 Mouw T, 2006, AM J SOCIOL, V112, P394, DOI 10.1086/506415 Borelli JL, 2006, J ABNORM CHILD PSYCH, V34, P159, DOI 10.1007/s10802-005-9010-y Cole DA, 2006, J ABNORM PSYCHOL, V115, P40, DOI 10.1037/0021-843X.115.1.40 Thomas CP, 2006, PSYCHIAT SERV, V57, P63, DOI 10.1176/appi.ps.57.1.63 Kalish Y, 2006, SOC NETWORKS, V28, P56, DOI 10.1016/j.socnet.2005.04.004 Ueno K, 2005, SOC SCI RES, V34, P484, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2004.03.002 Vitiello B, 2004, NEW ENGL J MED, V350, P1489, DOI 10.1056/NEJMp038248 Morris M, 2004, NETWORK EPIDEMIOLOGY SEGRIN C, 2004, J SOC CLIN PSYCHOL, V23, P815 Eisenberger NI, 2003, SCIENCE, V302, P290, DOI 10.1126/science.1089134 Snijders TAB, 2003, J MATH SOCIOL, V27, P123, DOI 10.1080/00222500390213119 Brendgen M, 2002, J ABNORM CHILD PSYCH, V30, P609, DOI 10.1023/A:1020863730902 Daley SE, 2002, J CONSULT CLIN PSYCH, V70, P129, DOI 10.1037//0022-006X.70.1.129 Moody J, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P679, DOI 10.1086/338954 Jacobson NS, 2001, CLIN PSYCHOL-SCI PR, V8, P255, DOI 10.1093/clipsy/8.3.255 Link BG, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P363, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.27.1.363 McPherson M, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P415, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.27.1.415 Lin N., 2001, SOCIAL CAPITAL THEOR Snijders T. A. B., 2001, SOCIOL METHODOL, P361, DOI 10.1111/0081-1750.00099 Hektner JM, 2000, J CLIN CHILD PSYCHOL, V29, P603, DOI 10.1207/S15374424JCCP2904_12 Berkman LF, 2000, SOC SCI MED, V51, P843, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(00)00065-4 Segrin C, 2000, HUM COMMUN RES, V26, P489, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-2958.2000.tb00766.x Berkman L, 2000, SOCIAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, P137 KULIK JA, 2000, HDB SOCIAL COMP THEO, P295 Hedstrom Peter, 1998, SOCIAL MECH ANAL APP CAIRNS R, 1998, NEW DIR CHILD ADOLES, V109, P25 Rudolph KD, 1997, J ABNORM CHILD PSYCH, V25, P33, DOI 10.1023/A:1025755307508 HermanStahl M, 1996, J YOUTH ADOLESCENCE, V25, P733, DOI 10.1007/BF01537451 Baker M, 1996, J ABNORM CHILD PSYCH, V24, P241, DOI 10.1007/BF01441630 HOGUE A, 1995, DEV PSYCHOL, V31, P897, DOI 10.1037/0012-1649.31.6.897 BAUMEISTER RF, 1995, PSYCHOL BULL, V117, P497, DOI 10.1037/0033-2909.117.3.497 ROOK KS, 1994, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V67, P548, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.67.3.548 RUDOLPH KD, 1994, J ABNORM CHILD PSYCH, V22, P355, DOI 10.1007/BF02168079 COMPAS BE, 1993, PSYCHOL BULL, V114, P323, DOI 10.1037//0033-2909.114.2.323 LEWINSOHN PM, 1993, J ABNORM PSYCHOL, V102, P133, DOI 10.1037//0021-843X.102.1.133 ROSENBLATT A, 1991, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V60, P620, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.60.4.620 CANTWELL DP, 1991, J YOUTH ADOLESCENCE, V20, P121, DOI 10.1007/BF01537604 WELLMAN B, 1990, AM J SOCIOL, V96, P558, DOI 10.1086/229572 BAUMEISTER RF, 1990, J SOC CLIN PSYCHOL, V9, P165, DOI 10.1521/jscp.1990.9.2.165 LINK BG, 1989, AM SOCIOL REV, V54, P400, DOI 10.2307/2095613 HOUSE JS, 1988, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V14, P293, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.14.1.293 MCPHERSON JM, 1987, AM SOCIOL REV, V52, P370, DOI 10.2307/2095356 Lin N., 1986, SOCIAL SUPPORT LIFE FELD SL, 1981, AM J SOCIOL, V86, P1015, DOI 10.1086/227352 House J.S, 1981, WORK STRESS SOCIAL S PRISBELL M, 1980, COMMUNICATION Q, V28, P22 PENNEBAKER JW, 1979, PERS SOC PSYCHOL B, V5, P122, DOI 10.1177/014616727900500127 KANDEL DB, 1978, AM J SOCIOL, V84, P427, DOI 10.1086/226792 RADLOFF L S, 1977, Applied Psychological Measurement, V1, P385, DOI 10.1177/014662167700100306 Blau P.M, 1977, INEQUALITY HETEROGEN COYNE JC, 1976, J ABNORM PSYCHOL, V85, P186, DOI 10.1037//0021-843X.85.2.186 COYNE JC, 1976, PSYCHIATRY, V39, P28 Byrne D., 1971, ATTRACTION PARADIGM GREENBER.MS, 1971, SOCIOMETRY, V34, P290, DOI 10.2307/2786418 ROGERS EM, 1970, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V34, P523, DOI 10.1086/267838 Merton R. K., 1968, SOCIAL THEORY SOCIAL Schachter S., 1959, PSYCHOL AFFILIATION NR 84 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD OCT PY 2011 VL 76 IS 5 BP 764 EP 785 DI 10.1177/0003122411420813 PG 22 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 826EO UT WOS:000295334500006 ER PT J AU Delhey, J Newton, K Welzel, C AF Delhey, Jan Newton, Kenneth Welzel, Christian TI How General Is Trust in "Most People"? Solving the Radius of Trust Problem SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE civicness; general trust; in-group/out-group trust; social capital; trust radius ID SOCIAL TRUST; ETHNIC DIVERSITY; COUNTRIES; DEMOCRACY; ORIGINS; DETERMINANTS; EMBEDDEDNESS; FOUNDATIONS; IMMIGRATION; PERSPECTIVE AB Generalized trust has become a paramount topic throughout the social sciences, in its own right and as the key civic component of social capital. To date, cross-national research relies on the standard question: "Generally speaking, would you say that most people can be trusted or that you need to be very careful in dealing with people?" Yet the radius problem-that is, how wide a circle of others respondents imagine as "most people"-makes comparisons between individuals and countries problematic. Until now, much about the radius problem has been speculation, but data for 51 countries from the latest World Values Survey make it possible to estimate how wide the trust radius actually is. We do this by relating responses to the standard trust question to a new battery of items that measures in-group and out-group trust. In 41 out of 51 countries, "most people" in the standard question predominantly connotes out-groups. To this extent, it is a valid measure of general trust in others. Nevertheless, the radius of "most people" varies considerably across countries; it is substantially narrower in Confucian countries and wider in wealthy countries. Some country rankings on trust thus change dramatically when the standard question is replaced by a radius-adjusted trust score. In cross-country regressions, the radius of trust matters for civic attitudes and behaviors because the assumed civic nature of trust depends on a wide radius. C1 [Delhey, Jan] Univ Bremen, Sch Humanities & Social Sci, D-28759 Bremen, Germany. [Newton, Kenneth] Univ Southampton, Southampton SO9 5NH, Hants, England. [Welzel, Christian] Univ Luneburg, Ctr Study Democracy, D-21335 Luneburg, Germany. [Welzel, Christian] Higher Sch Econ St Petersburg, St Petersburg, Russia. RP Delhey, J (reprint author), Univ Bremen, Sch Humanities & Social Sci, Campus Ring 1, D-28759 Bremen, Germany EM j.delhey@jacobs-university.de; cwelzel@gmail.com CR Kesler C, 2010, CAN J POLIT SCI, V43, P319, DOI 10.1017/S0008423910000077 Sturgis P, 2010, INT J PUBLIC OPIN R, V22, P74, DOI 10.1093/ijpor/edq003 World Bank, 2010, WORLD DEV IND Milfont T. L., 2010, International Journal of Psychological Research, V3, P111 WELZEL C, 2010, J CROSS CULTURAL PSY, V41, P1 Freitag M, 2009, COMP POLIT STUD, V42, P1537, DOI 10.1177/0010414009332151 Freitag M, 2009, EUR J POLIT RES, V48, P782, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-6765.2009.00849.x Gesthuizen M, 2009, SCAND POLIT STUD, V32, P121, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9477.2008.00217.x Hooghe M, 2009, COMP POLIT STUD, V42, P198, DOI 10.1177/0010414008325286 World Values Survey Association, 2009, WORLD VAL SURV 2005 VANDERMEER T, 2009, J CIVIL SOC, V5, P227 ROSE R, 2009, DEMOCRATIZATION, P10 MOOD C, 2009, EUROPEAN SOCIOLOGICA, V26, P67 Rothstein B, 2008, COMP POLIT, V40, P441 Bjornskov C, 2008, EUR SOCIOL REV, V24, P271, DOI 10.1093/esr/jcn004 Realo A, 2008, J CROSS CULT PSYCHOL, V39, P447, DOI 10.1177/0022022108318096 Uslaner EM, 2008, CAMB J ECON, V32, P289, DOI 10.1093/cje/bem039 Reeskens T, 2008, SOC INDIC RES, V85, P515, DOI 10.1007/s11205-007-9100-z Nannestad P, 2008, ANNU REV POLIT SCI, V11, P413, DOI 10.1146/annurev.polisci.11.060606.135412 ROSSTEUTSCHER S, 2008, POLITICAL STUDIES, V50, P445 GAT A, 2008, WAR HUMAN CIVILIZATI Welzel C, 2007, INT POLIT SCI REV, V28, P397, DOI 10.1177/0192512107079640 Glanville JL, 2007, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V70, P230 Welch MR, 2007, SOC FORCES, V86, P23, DOI 10.1353/sof.2007.0116 Paxton P, 2007, SOC FORCES, V86, P47, DOI 10.1353/sof.2007.0107 Mizrachi N, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P143 Putnam RD, 2007, SCAND POLIT STUD, V30, P137, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9477.2007.00176.x Newton K, 2007, OXFORD HDB POLITICAL, P342 USLANER EM, 2007, GENERALIZED TR UNPUB Brambor T, 2006, POLIT ANAL, V14, P63, DOI 10.1093/pan/mpi014 Leigh A, 2006, ECON REC, V82, P268, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-4932.2006.00339.x Ammori Marvin, 2011, MODELS DEMOCRACY Bjornskov C., 2006, EUROPEAN J POLITICAL, V22, P22, DOI DOI 10.1016/J.EJPOLECO.2005.05.006 Goertz Gary, 2006, SOCIAL SCI CONCEPTS Bahry D, 2005, AM POLIT SCI REV, V99, P521 Welch MR, 2005, SOCIOL INQ, V75, P453, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2005.00132.x Delhey J, 2005, EUR SOCIOL REV, V21, P311, DOI 10.1093/esr/jci022 Gerring J, 2005, WORLD POLIT, V57, P323, DOI 10.1353/wp.2006.0002 Inglehart Ronald, 2005, MODERNIZATION CULTUR UNDP, 2005, HUM DEV REP 2005 YOU JS, 2005, ANN M AM SOC ASS PHI DALEN K, 2005, THESIS U BERGEN BERG SHIN DC, 2005, VALUES LIFE STYLES U, P57 Messner SF, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P882 Helliwell JF, 2004, PHILOS T ROY SOC B, V359, P1435, DOI 10.1098/rstb.2004.1522 STOLLE D, 2004, ACTA POLIT, V39, P422, DOI 10.1057/palgrave.ap.5500081 TRIANDIS HC, 2004, CULTURE SOCIAL BEHAV SCHUPP J, 2004, VERTRAUEN DEUTSCHLAN Uslaner EM, 2003, AM POLIT RES, V31, P331, DOI 10.1177/1532673X03252528 Fearon JD, 2003, J ECON GROWTH, V8, P195, DOI 10.1023/A:1024419522867 Freitag M, 2003, EUR SOCIOL REV, V19, P217, DOI 10.1093/esr/19.2.217 Delhey J, 2003, EUR SOC, V5, P93, DOI 10.1080/1461669032000072256 KAUFMANN D, 2003, GOVT MATTERS 3 GOVER FORBES HD, 2003, PSYCHOL ETHNIC CULTU, P69 Alesina A, 2002, J PUBLIC ECON, V85, P207, DOI 10.1016/S0047-2727(01)00084-6 Paxton P, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P254, DOI 10.2307/3088895 Uslaner E., 2002, MORAL FDN TRUST FEHR E, 2002, DIW DISCUSSION PAPER, V319 LI W, 2002, SHEHUIXUE YANJIU, V2, P11 Paldam M, 2001, KYKLOS, V54, P383, DOI 10.1111/j.0023-5962.2001.00160.x Glaeser EL, 2000, Q J ECON, V115, P811, DOI 10.1162/003355300554926 Inglehart R, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P19, DOI 10.2307/2657288 Putnam R. D., 2000, BOWLING ALONE COLLAP DAHL RA, 2000, DEMOCRACY HARDIN R, 2000, DEMOCRACY TRUST, P22 Inglehart R., 1999, DEMOCRACY TRUST, P88, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511659959.004 Sztompka P, 1999, TRUST SOCIOLOGICAL T Whiteley P.F, 1999, SOCIAL CAPITAL EUROP, P25 FUKUYAMA F, 1999, IMF C 2 GEN REF INT Stolle D, 1998, AM BEHAV SCI, V42, P47, DOI 10.1177/0002764298042001005 Steenkamp JBEM, 1998, J CONSUM RES, V25, P78, DOI 10.1086/209528 Portes A, 1998, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V24, P1, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.24.1.1 Inkeles A., 1998, ONE WORLD EMERGING C Knack S, 1997, Q J ECON, V112, P1251, DOI 10.1162/003355300555475 Inglehart R, 1997, MODERNIZATION POSTMO Portes A., 1996, AM PROSPECT, V26, p[18, 94] VANDETH J, 1996, WAHLEN POLITISCHE EI, P389 Putnam R., 1995, J DEMOCR, V6, P65, DOI DOI 10.1353/JOD.1995.0002 Fukuyama F., 1995, TRUST SOCIAL VIRTUES Verba S., 1995, VOICE EQUALITY CIVIC YAMAGISHI T, 1994, MOTIV EMOTION, V18, P129, DOI 10.1007/BF02249397 PORTES A, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1320, DOI 10.1086/230191 MARKUS HR, 1991, PSYCHOL REV, V98, P224, DOI 10.1037/0033-295X.98.2.224 Coleman J.S, 1990, FDN SOCIAL THEORY Axelrod R.A., 1990, EVOLUTION COOPERATIO WOLFE A, 1989, ACTA SOCIOL, V32, P221 Gambetta D., 1988, TRUST MAKING BREAKIN, P158 HEREK GM, 1987, J SOC ISSUES, V42, P99 ROTHBART M, 1985, J SOC ISSUES, V41, P81 WELCH RE, 1980, EVALUATION ECONOMETR, P153 Inkeles A., 1974, BECOMING MODERN INDI TAJFEL H, 1974, SOC SCI INFORM, V13, P65, DOI 10.1177/053901847401300204 INKELES A, 1966, MODERNIZATION MAN Banfield Edward C., 1958, MORAL BASIS BACKWARD Lerner Daniel, 1958, PASSING TRADITIONAL ROSENBERG M, 1957, J CONFLICT RESOLUT, V1, P340, DOI 10.1177/002200275700100403 Allport G. W., 1954, NATURE PREJUDICE NR 97 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD OCT PY 2011 VL 76 IS 5 BP 786 EP 807 DI 10.1177/0003122411420817 PG 22 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 826EO UT WOS:000295334500007 ER PT J AU Gibson, DR AF Gibson, David R. TI Avoiding Catastrophe: The Interactional Production of Possibility during the Cuban Missile Crisis SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID DECISION-MAKING; GROUP DISCUSSIONS; TURN-TAKING; ORGANIZATION; PARTICIPATION; INTERRUPTIONS; CONVERSATION; EXPECTATIONS; BLOCKING; HISTORY AB In October 1962, the fate of the world hung on the U. S. response to the discovery of Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba. President Kennedy's decision to impose a blockade was based on hours of discussions with top advisers (the so-called ExComm), yet decades of scholarship on the crisis have missed the central puzzle: How did the group select one response, the blockade, when all options seemed bad? Recently released audio recordings are used to argue that the key conversational activity was storytelling about an uncertain future. Kennedy's choice of a blockade hinged on the narrative "suppression" of its most dangerous possible consequence, namely the perils of a later attack against operational missiles, something accomplished through omission, self-censorship, ambiguation, uptake failure, and narrative interdiction. The article makes the very first connection between the localized dynamics of conversation and decision making in times of crisis, and offers a novel processual account of one of the most fateful decisions in human history. C1 Univ Penn, Dept Sociol, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA. RP Gibson, DR (reprint author), Univ Penn, Dept Sociol, 3718 Locust Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA EM gibsond@sas.upenn.edu CR Basten U, 2010, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V107, P21767, DOI 10.1073/pnas.0908104107 Maynard DW, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P791, DOI 10.1177/0003122410379582 Gibson DA, 2010, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V73, P132, DOI 10.1177/0190272510371456 Bueno de Mesquita B., 2009, PREDICTIONEERS GAME Gallagher C, 2008, REPRESENTATIONS, P23, DOI 10.1525/rep.2008.104.1.23 DOBBS M, 2008, ONE MINUTE MIDNIGHT Collins R, 2007, SOCIOL FORUM, V22, P247, DOI 10.1111/j.1573-7861.2007.00030.x Guler I, 2007, ADMIN SCI QUART, V52, P248 Wilde Melissa, 2007, VATICAN Cerulo K, 2006, NEVER SAW IT COMING Clarke L, 2006, WORST CASES TERROR C Zerubavel E., 2006, ELEPHANT ROOM SILENC Gibson DR, 2005, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V68, P316 Stivers T, 2005, SOC SCI MED, V60, P949, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2004.06.040 Heritage J, 2005, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V68, P15 Kerr NL, 2004, ANNU REV PSYCHOL, V55, P623, DOI 10.1146/annurev.psych.55.090902.142009 Abell P, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P287, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.29.01.0202.100113 Raymond G, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P939, DOI 10.2307/1519752 Stern Sheldon M., 2003, AVERTING FINAL FAILU Schlesinger Arthur Meier, 2002, 1000 DAYS JF KENNEDY SCHEGLOFF EA, 2002, STUDIES LANGUAGE SOC, P204 Devine DJ, 2001, PSYCHOL PUBLIC POL L, V7, P622, DOI 10.1037//1076-8971.7.3.622 Clayman SE, 2001, LANG SOC, V30, P403 Haas ML, 2001, INT STUD QUART, V45, P241, DOI 10.1111/0020-8833.00190 Abbott A, 2001, TIME MATTERS THEORY Zelikow Philip D., 2001, PRESIDENTIAL RECORDI Bernstein BJ, 2000, INT SECURITY, V25, P134, DOI 10.1162/016228800560417 Schegloff EA, 2000, LANG SOC, V29, P1 Bearman P, 1999, SOC SCI HIST, V23, P501 Allison G. T., 1999, ESSENCE DECISION EXP Mansbridge J., 1999, DELIBERATIVE POLITIC, P211 Clayman SE, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P178, DOI 10.2307/2657322 Olick JK, 1998, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V24, P105, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.24.1.105 Troyer L, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P692, DOI 10.1086/231253 Cruttenden A, 1997, INTONATION FURSENKO A, 1997, ONE HELL GAMBLE KHRU MAY ER, 1997, KENNEDY TAPES Vaughan D., 1996, CHALLENGER LAUNCH DE Weick K., 1995, SENSEMAKING ORG BENNETT PG, 1995, MERSHON INT STUD S1, V39, P19, DOI 10.2307/222691 Wagner-Pacifici Robin, 1994, DISCOURSE DESTRUCTIO Roy Beth, 1994, SOME TROUBLE COWS MA PADGETT JF, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1259, DOI 10.1086/230190 Lerner G., 1992, QUALITATIVE SOCIOLOG, V15, P247, DOI 10.1007/BF00990328 Drew Paul, 1992, TALK WORK INTERACTIO EDER D, 1991, AM SOCIOL REV, V56, P494, DOI 10.2307/2096270 FISEK MH, 1991, AM J SOCIOL, V97, P114, DOI 10.1086/229742 Schiffrin Deborah, 1990, CONFLICT TALK SOCIOL, P241 Foucault M., 1990, HIST SEXUALITY INTRO WELCH DA, 1989, J CONFLICT RESOLUT, V33, P430, DOI 10.1177/0022002789033003003 HEREK GM, 1989, J CONFLICT RESOLUT, V33, P446, DOI 10.1177/0022002789033003004 SMITHLOVIN L, 1989, AM SOCIOL REV, V54, P424, DOI 10.2307/2095614 Mandelbaum Jenny, 1989, W J SPEECH COMMUNICA, V53, P114 BLIGHT JG, 1989, BRINK AM SOVIETS REE EDER D, 1988, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V51, P225, DOI 10.2307/2786921 GERSICK CJG, 1988, ACAD MANAGE J, V31, P9, DOI 10.2307/256496 HEREK GM, 1987, J CONFLICT RESOLUT, V31, P203, DOI 10.1177/0022002787031002001 Schiffrin Deborah, 1987, DISCOURSE MARKERS Schegloff Emmanuel A, 1987, TALK SOCIAL ORG, P70 Schegloff Emanuel A., 1987, MICROMACRO LINK, P207 WELCH DA, 1987, INT SECURITY, V12, P5, DOI 10.2307/2538800 MOLOTCH HL, 1985, AM SOCIOL REV, V50, P273, DOI 10.2307/2095539 Pomerantz A, 1984, STRUCTURES SOCIAL AC, P57 STAFFORD L, 1984, HUM COMMUN RES, V10, P379, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-2958.1984.tb00024.x ANDERSON PA, 1983, ADMIN SCI QUART, V28, P201, DOI 10.2307/2392618 Janis I., 1982, GROUPTHINK PSYCHOL S FINE GA, 1979, AM SOCIOL REV, V44, P733, DOI 10.2307/2094525 CARROLL JS, 1978, J EXP SOC PSYCHOL, V14, P88, DOI 10.1016/0022-1031(78)90062-8 ARGYRIS C, 1976, ADMIN SCI QUART, V21, P363, DOI 10.2307/2391848 Weiner S. S., 1976, AMBIGUITY CHOICE ORG, P225 SACKS H, 1974, LANGUAGE, V50, P696, DOI 10.2307/412243 SALANCIK GR, 1974, ADMIN SCI QUART, V19, P453, DOI 10.2307/2391803 Janis I, 1972, VICTIMS GROUPTHINK P COHEN MD, 1972, ADMIN SCI QUART, V17, P1, DOI 10.2307/2392088 Allison Graham, 1971, ESSENCE DECISION EXP Kennedy Robert, 1969, 13 DAYS MEMOIR CUBAN Labov W., 1967, ESSAYS VERBAL VISUAL, P12 Sorensen Theodore C., 1965, KENNEDY MCNAMARA RS, 1964, COMMUNICATION 0404 SCHUTZ A, 1962, COLLECTED PAPERS, V2 *US DEP STAT, 1961, FOR REL US 1961 1963, V11 Dewey John, 1922, HUMAN NATURE CONDUCT Dewey J., 1910, WE THINK Gibson David R., TALK BRINK IN PRESS NR 84 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD SEP PY 2011 VL 117 IS 2 BP 361 EP 419 DI 10.1086/661761 PG 59 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 835PK UT WOS:000296048100001 ER PT J AU Phillips, DJ AF Phillips, Damon J. TI Jazz and the Disconnected: City Structural Disconnectedness and the Emergence of a Jazz Canon, 1897-1933 SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID INTERORGANIZATIONAL COLLABORATION; NETWORK STRUCTURE; SOCIAL NETWORKS; UNITED-STATES; LIFE SCIENCES; INNOVATION; IDENTITY; CENTRALITY; BROKERAGE; INDUSTRY AB The study of organizations and markets suffers from the underdevelopment of disconnected producers. This article emphasizes the imputed identities of sources to argue that difficult-to-categorize outputs were appealing when associated with a source high in disconnectedness. Worldwide data on recordings and mobility with detailed data on Midwest recordings provide evidence that jazz from cities high in disconnectedness was rerecorded more often by musicians over time. Moreover, recordings with difficult-to-categorize elements were more likely to be rerecorded when coming from cities high in disconnectedness, despite evidence that original music was paradoxically less likely to come from these cities. C1 Columbia Univ, Columbia Business Sch, New York, NY 10027 USA. RP Phillips, DJ (reprint author), Columbia Univ, Columbia Business Sch, 717 Uris Hall, New York, NY 10027 USA EM djphillips@columbia.edu CR POWELL WW, 2011, EMERGENCE ORG MARKET, pCH13 Cheyne A, 2010, POETICS, V38, P336, DOI 10.1016/j.poetic.2010.01.001 Singh J, 2010, MANAGE SCI, V56, P41, DOI 10.1287/mnsc.1090.1072 LIU C, 2010, 11012 HARV BUS SCH Phillips DJ, 2009, ORGAN SCI, V20, P481, DOI 10.1287/orsc.1080.0371 Tripsas M, 2009, ORGAN SCI, V20, P441, DOI 10.1287/orsc.1080.0419 FAULKNER RR, 2009, DO YOU KNOW JAZZ REP KANTER RM, 2009, OXFORD HDB SOCIOLOGY, P291 Lena JC, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P697 Cattani G, 2008, ADMIN SCI QUART, V53, P145, DOI 10.2189/asqu.53.1.145 Amburgey TL, 2008, ADV STRAT M, V25, P171, DOI 10.1016/50742-3322(08)25005-9 Rosenkopf L, 2007, STRATEG ENTREP J, V1, P191, DOI 10.1002/sej.33 Fleming L, 2007, ADMIN SCI QUART, V52, P443 Schilling MA, 2007, MANAGE SCI, V53, P1113, DOI 10.1287/mnsc.1060.0624 Johnston J, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P165, DOI 10.1086/518923 Fleming L, 2007, ORGAN SCI, V18, P165, DOI 10.1287/orsc.1060.0242 Babon KM, 2006, POETICS, V34, P151, DOI 10.1016/j.poetic.2006.01.003 Salganik MJ, 2006, SCIENCE, V311, P854, DOI 10.1126/science.1121066 TSCHMUCK P, 2006, CREATIVITY INNOVATIO ZEITZ J, 2006, FLAPPEN MADCAP STORY WERTHEIM AF, 2006, VAUDEVILLE WARS Uzzi B, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P447, DOI 10.1086/432782 Obstfeld D, 2005, ADMIN SCI QUART, V50, P100 Powell WW, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P1132, DOI 10.1086/421508 Nagin D. S., 2005, GROUP BASED MODELING Newman MEJ, 2005, SOC NETWORKS, V27, P39, DOI 10.1016/j.socnet.2004.11.009 Burt Ronald S., 2005, BROKERAGE CLOSURE Brandes U., 2005, NETWORK ANAL METHODO Segell Michael, 2005, DEVILS HORN STORY SA STANFIELD P, 2005, BODY SOUL JAZZ BLUES CORNWELL B, 2005, CONNECTIONS, V26, P70 2005, HARVARD LAW REV, V118, P1941 LORD T, 2005, JAZZ DISCOGRAPHY T L HENIG R, 2005, ORIGINS 2 WORLD WAR MILLER M, 2005, SOME HUSTLIN THIS Burt RS, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P349, DOI 10.1086/421787 Roy WG, 2004, POETICS, V32, P265, DOI 10.1016/j.poetic.2004.06.001 Phillips DJ, 2004, POETICS, V32, P281, DOI 10.1016/j.poetic.2004.06.003 Moody J, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P213 Zukin S, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P173, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.30.012703.110553 Fine G. A., 2004, EVERYDAY GENIUS SELF BROWN LB, 2004, POP MUSIC, V23, P241, DOI 10.1017/S0261143004000169 Owen-Smith J, 2003, RES POLICY, V32, P1695, DOI 10.1016/S0048-7333(03)00045-3 Pond SF, 2003, NOTES, V60, P11, DOI 10.1353/not.2003.0124 Menon T, 2003, MANAGE SCI, V49, P497, DOI 10.1287/mnsc.49.4.497.14422 Fine GA, 2003, THEOR SOC, V32, P153, DOI 10.1023/A:1023943503531 Phillips KW, 2003, PERS SOC PSYCHOL B, V29, P3, DOI 10.1177/0146167202238367 CONNELL J., 2003, SOUND TRACKS POPULAR Rao H, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V108, P795, DOI 10.1086/367917 Jackson JH, 2003, MAKING JAZZ FRENCH M SMITH EL, 2003, AFRICAN AM THEATER B Dowd TJ, 2003, COMP SOC RES, V21, P147, DOI 10.1016/S0195-6310(03)21006-1 VANDERTUUK A, 2003, PARAMOUNTS RISE FALL LENA JC, 2003, POETICS, V32, P297 PARSONAGE C, 2003, POP MUSIC, V22, P315, DOI 10.1017/S0261143003003210 NELSON LJ, 2003, RUMORS INDISCRETION NAKIENE A, 2003, STUDIA MUSICOLOGICA, V44, P153, DOI 10.1556/SMus.44.2003.1-2.15 RAYNO D, 2003, STUDIES JAZZ, V43 Borgatti S., 2002, UCINET WINDOWS SOFTW Lopes P.D., 2002, RISE JAZZ ART WORLD BROWN A, 2002, RENAISSANCE STUDIES, V16, P113, DOI 10.1111/1477-4658.t01-1-00008 GARA L, 2002, BODY DODDS STORY KOENIG K, 2002, JAZZ PRINT 1856 1929 SCHWARTZ EI, 2002, LAST LONE INVENTOR T Koenker R, 2001, J ECON PERSPECT, V15, P143, DOI 10.1257/jep.15.4.143 Reagans R, 2001, ORGAN SCI, V12, P502, DOI 10.1287/orsc.12.4.502.10637 Sorenson O, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P1546, DOI 10.1086/321301 Sorenson O, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P424, DOI 10.1086/316962 Stuart TE, 2000, STRATEGIC MANAGE J, V21, P791, DOI 10.1002/1097-0266(200008)21:8<791::AID-SMJ121>3.0.CO;2-K Zuckerman EW, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V104, P1398, DOI 10.1086/210178 Watts Duncan J., 1999, SMALL WORLDS DYNAMIC Kenney W.H., 1999, RECORDED MUSIC AM LI BUSHELL G, 1998, JAZZ BEGINNING PERETTI B, 1998, JAZZ AM CULTURE Block S, 1997, MUSIC THEOR SPECTRUM, V19, P206, DOI 10.1525/mts.1997.19.2.02a00040 Borgatti S. P., 1997, CONNECTIONS, V20, P35 DeVeaux Scott, 1997, BIRTH BEBOP SOCIAL M Peterson R.A., 1997, CREATING COUNTRY MUS GIOIA T, 1997, HIST JAZZ BECKER H, 1997, OUTSIDERS Powell WW, 1996, ADMIN SCI QUART, V41, P116, DOI 10.2307/2393988 Bourdieu P, 1996, RULES ART GENESIS ST Stark D, 1996, AM J SOCIOL, V101, P993, DOI 10.1086/230786 MURRAY JM, 1996, B HIST RES MUSIC ED, V18, P1 SUCHMAN MC, 1995, ACAD MANAGE REV, V20, P571, DOI 10.2307/258788 BARAKA A, 1995, AFR AM REV, V29, P249, DOI 10.2307/3042302 KERNFELD B, 1995, NOTES, V51, P865, DOI 10.2307/899288 TITON JT, 1995, EARLY DOWNHOME BLUES Martin P. J., 1995, SOUNDS SOC THEMES SO KERNFELD B, 1994, NOTES, V51, P501, DOI 10.2307/898859 FERNANDEZ RM, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V99, P1455, DOI 10.1086/230451 Rosenbloom R., 1994, IND CORP CHANGE, V3, P655, DOI 10.1093/icc/3.3.655 Berliner P., 1994, THINKING JAZZ INFINI SUTTON A, 1994, DIRECTORY AM DISC RE KENNEDY R, 1994, JELLY ROLL BIX HOAGY 1994, NEW GROVE DICT JAZZ WHITEOAK J, 1994, POP MUSIC, V13, P279, DOI 10.1017/S0261143000007200 PADGETT JF, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1259, DOI 10.1086/230190 PODOLNY JM, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P829, DOI 10.1086/230091 KENNEY WH, 1993, CHICAGO JAZZ CULTURA BIKHCHANDANI S, 1992, J POLIT ECON, V100, P992, DOI 10.1086/261849 BOTAFOGO RA, 1992, ACM T INFORM SYST, V10, P142, DOI 10.1145/146802.146826 Burt R.S., 1992, STRUCTURAL HOLES SOC Crawford Richard, 1992, JAZZ STANDARDS RECOR MCCRUM R, 1992, STORY ENGLISH Peretti Burton, 1992, CREATION JAZZ MUSIC DEVEAUX S, 1991, BLACK AM LIT FORUM, V25, P525, DOI 10.2307/3041812 BURT W, 1991, LEONARDO MUSIC J, V1, P5, DOI 10.2307/1513113 ANDERSON P, 1990, ADMIN SCI QUART, V35, P604, DOI 10.2307/2393511 HENDERSON RM, 1990, ADMIN SCI QUART, V35, P9, DOI 10.2307/2393549 LEVINE LW, 1989, J AM FOLKLORE, V102, P6, DOI 10.2307/540078 PRICE S, 1989, PRIMITIVE ART CIVILI Ogren Kathy, 1989, JAZZ REVOLUTION 20S COLEMAN JS, 1988, AM J SOCIOL, V94, pS95, DOI 10.1086/228943 DIMAGGIO P, 1987, AM SOCIOL REV, V52, P440, DOI 10.2307/2095290 BONACICH P, 1987, AM J SOCIOL, V92, P1170, DOI 10.1086/228631 GRISWOLD W, 1987, AM J SOCIOL, V92, P1077, DOI 10.1086/228628 DANZI M, 1986, AM MUSICIAN BERLIN M SCHULLER G, 1986, EARLY JAZZ ITS ROOTS Jules-Rosette Bennetta, 1984, MESSAGES TOURIST ART ALLEN IL, 1984, SEX ROLES, V11, P43, DOI 10.1007/BF00287439 COLLINS R, 1983, SOCIOL QUART, V24, P185, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1983.tb00697.x Burt R. S., 1982, STRUCTURAL THEORY AC Becker H, 1982, ART WORLDS DIMAGGIO P, 1982, MEDIA CULT SOC, V4, P33, DOI 10.1177/016344378200400104 Hebdige Dick, 1979, SUBCULTURE MEANING S LIGHT I, 1977, AM SOCIOL REV, V342, P464 MAURER DW, 1976, AM SPEECH, V51, P5, DOI 10.2307/455351 RICH MF, 1976, WHOS WHO OPERA KATZ J, 1975, AM J SOCIOL, V80, P1369, DOI 10.1086/225995 MOXLEY RL, 1974, SOCIOMETRY, V37, P122, DOI 10.2307/2786472 HIRSCH PM, 1972, AM J SOCIOL, V77, P639, DOI 10.1086/225192 KATZ J, 1972, SOC PROBL, V20, P186, DOI 10.1525/sp.1972.20.2.03a00050 RUST B, 1969, JAZZ RECORDS 1897 19, V1 MERTON RK, 1968, SCIENCE, V159, P56, DOI 10.1126/science.159.3810.56 CANCIAN F, 1967, AM SOCIOL REV, V32, P912, DOI 10.2307/2092845 LEONARD N, 1962, JAZZ WHITE AM Merton R, 1957, SOCIAL THEORY SOCIAL GOLD RS, 1957, AM SPEECH, V32, P271, DOI 10.2307/453976 SATTERFIELD J, 1956, MUSIC EDUC J, V42, P84, DOI 10.2307/3388173 Becker HS, 1951, AM J SOCIOL, V57, P136, DOI 10.1086/220913 Simmel G., 1950, SOCIOLOGY G SIMMEL Bavelas A., 1950, J ACOUST SOC AM, V22, P271 HURSTON ZN, 1942, AM MERCURY JUL, V55, P89 HURSTON ZN, 1942, AM MERCURY JUL, V55, P96 Adorno Theodor W., 1941, STUDIES PHILOS SOCIA, V9, P17 Kraus HM, 1931, J EDUC RES, V24, P299 Wolfe Thomas., 1929, LOOK HOMEWARD ANGEL LAUBENSTEIN PF, 1929, MUSICAL Q, V15, P606 WHITEMAN P, 1926, JAZZ AUSTIN C, 1925, MUSIC LETT, V6, P256, DOI 10.1093/ml/6.3.256 BIRCHARD CC, 1925, MUSIC SUPERVISORS J, V1, P56 FITZGERALD FS, 1922, TALES JAZZ AGE NR 153 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD SEP PY 2011 VL 117 IS 2 BP 420 EP 483 DI 10.1086/661757 PG 64 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 835PK UT WOS:000296048100002 ER PT J AU Hillmann, H Aven, BL AF Hillmann, Henning Aven, Brandy L. TI Fragmented Networks and Entrepreneurship in Late Imperial Russia SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID EARLY INDUSTRIALIZATION; COLLABORATION; COHESION; GROWTH; MEXICO AB Emergent economies suffer from underdeveloped market infrastructures and insufficient public institutions to enforce contract commitments and property rights. Informal reputation-based arrangements may substitute for government enforcement, but they require close-knit networks that enable monitoring. Economic development also requires access to capital, information, and other resources, which is enabled by wide-reaching and diverse networks and not by closure. How is entrepreneurship possible given these conflicting demands? In this article, the authors examine how partnership networks and reputation channel the mobilization of capital for new enterprises, using quantitative information on 4,172 corporate partnerships during the industrialization of late imperial Russia (1869-1913). They find that reputation is locally effective in small and homogeneous network components. By contrast, founders in the largest components that form the network core raise more capital from investors but benefit less from reputation and more from brokerage opportunities and ties that reach diverse communities. C1 [Hillmann, Henning] Univ Mannheim, Dept Sociol, Sch Social Sci, D-68131 Mannheim, Germany. [Aven, Brandy L.] Carnegie Mellon Univ, Tepper Sch Business, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA. RP Hillmann, H (reprint author), Univ Mannheim, Dept Sociol, Sch Social Sci, D-68131 Mannheim, Germany EM hillmann@uni-mann-heim.de CR Wimmer A, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V116, P583, DOI 10.1086/653658 Kossinets G, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P405 Mokyr J., 2009, ENLIGHTENED EC EC HI Safford Sean, 2009, WHY GARDEN CLUB COUL Musacchio A, 2007, ENTERP SOC, V8, P842, DOI 10.1093/es/khm079 Greif A, 2006, I PATH MODERN EC LES Uzzi B, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P447, DOI 10.1086/432782 Powell WW, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P1132, DOI 10.1086/421508 Podolny JM, 2005, STATUS SIGNALS: A SOCIOLOGICAL STUDY OF MARKET COMPETITION, P1 Burt R. S., 2005, BROKERAGE CLOSURE IN Adams Julia, 2005, FAMILIAL STATE RULIN MORCK Randall, 2005, HIST CORPORATE GOVER Owen Thomas C., 2005, DILEMMAS RUSSIAN CAP Moody J, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P213 Fafchamps Marcel, 2004, MARKET I SUBSAHARAN Ruef M, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P195, DOI 10.2307/1519766 Moody J, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P103, DOI 10.2307/3088904 Brower Daniel, 2003, TURKESTAN FATE RUSSI Haber S., 2003, POLITICS PROPERTY RI Freeze ChaeRan, 2001, PALE JEWISH ENCOUNTE Maurer N, 2001, J ECON HIST, V61, P950 Kappeler Andreas, 2001, RUSSLAND VIELVOLKERR Stuart TE, 1999, ADMIN SCI QUART, V44, P315, DOI 10.2307/2666998 Bassin Mark, 1999, IMPERIAL VISIONS NAT Weingast BR, 1997, AM POLIT SCI REV, V91, P245, DOI 10.2307/2952354 Weeks T. R., 1996, NATION STATE LATE IM Gould Roger V., 1995, INSURGENT IDENTITIES GATRELL P, 1995, CAH MONDE RUSSE, V36, P37, DOI 10.3406/cmr.1995.2420 Gregory Paul, 1994, COMMAND EC HIST RUSS Eklof Ben, 1994, RUSSIAS GREAT REFORM Burt R.S., 1992, STRUCTURAL HOLES SOC Owen Thomas C., 1992, RUSCORP DATABASE COR Clowes Edith W., 1991, TSAR PEOPLE ED SOC Q Ellickson R., 1991, ORDER LAW NEIGHBORS Owen Thomas, 1991, CORPORATION RUSSIAN Owen Thomas C., 1991, TSAR PEOPLE ED SOC Q, P75 Coleman J.S, 1990, FDN SOCIAL THEORY Fernandez Roberto, 1989, SOCIOL METHODOL, V19, P89, DOI DOI 10.2307/270949 Kahan Arcadius, 1989, RUSSIAN EC HIST 19 C Gatrell Peter, 1986, TSARIST EC 1850 1917 Rogger Hans, 1986, JEWISH POLICIES RIGH JOFFE M, 1984, RUSS HIST-HIST RUSS, V11, P389 CARSTENSEN FV, 1984, AM ENTERPRISE FOREIG Ruckman Jo Ann, 1984, MOSCOW BUSINESS ELIT Guroff Gregory, 1983, ENTREPRENEURSHIP IMP Owen Thomas C., 1983, ENTREPRENEURSHIP IMP, P59 Carstensen Fred V., 1983, ENTREPRENEURSHIP IMP, P140 Richer A., 1982, MERCHANTS ENTREPRENE Gregory Paul R., 1982, RUSSIAN NATL INCOME North Douglas C., 1981, STRUCTURE CHANGE EC Owen Thomas C., 1981, CAPITALISM POLITICS Crisp Olga, 1976, STUDIES RUSSIAN EC 1 McKay John P., 1970, PIONEERS PROFIT FORE Strumilin Stanislav Gustavovich, 1966, OCHERKI EKONOMICHESK Von Laue Theodore H., 1963, S WITTE IND RUSSIA Gerschenkron A., 1962, EC BACKWARDNESS HIST NR 56 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD SEP PY 2011 VL 117 IS 2 BP 484 EP 538 DI 10.1086/661772 PG 55 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 835PK UT WOS:000296048100003 ER PT J AU Schofer, E Longhofer, W AF Schofer, Evan Longhofer, Wesley TI The Structural Sources of Association SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID UNITED-STATES; CIVIC ENGAGEMENT; ENVIRONMENTAL-PROTECTION; ADVOCACY ORGANIZATIONS; POLICY FEEDBACK; WORLD SOCIETY; NATION-STATE; MODELS; PARTICIPATION; MEMBERSHIP AB Where do associations come from? The authors argue that the expansion and openness of state institutions encourage the formation of associations. Moreover, the institutional structures of world society provide important resources and legitimation for association. Longitudinal cross-national data on voluntary associations are analyzed using panel models with fixed-effects and instrumental variables models to address possible endogeneity. Institutional features of the state and the structures of world society are linked to higher levels of association, as are wealth and education. These factors differentially affect specific types of association, helping make sense of the distinctive configurations of civil society observed around the globe. C1 [Schofer, Evan] Univ Calif Irvine, Irvine, CA 92697 USA. [Longhofer, Wesley] Emory Univ, Goizueta Business Sch, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA. RP Schofer, E (reprint author), Univ Calif Irvine, 3151 Social Sci Plaza, Irvine, CA 92697 USA EM schofer@soc.uci.edu CR Walker ET, 2011, AM J SOCIOL, V116, P1284 World Bank, 2010, WORLD DEV IND 2010 Rossteutscher S, 2010, AM BEHAV SCI, V53, P737, DOI 10.1177/0002764209350835 ANDREWS KT, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P1119 LONGHOFER W, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P505 GALE, 2010, ENCY ASS INT ORG MARSHALL MG, 2010, POLITY, V4 Dill B, 2009, DEV CHANGE, V40, P717 Allison P.D., 2009, FIXED EFFECTS REGRES Simmons Beth A., 2009, MOBILIZING HUMAN RIG BECK N, 2009, MODELING DYNAMICS TI Minkoff D, 2008, SOC PROBL, V55, P525, DOI 10.1525/sp.2008.55.4.525 Tsutsui K, 2008, SOC PROBL, V55, P391, DOI 10.1525/sp.2008.55.3.391 Wollebaek D, 2008, NONPROF VOLUNT SEC Q, V37, P249, DOI 10.1177/0899764007304754 Baltagi B. H., 2008, ECONOMETRIC ANAL PAN Banks Arthur S, 2008, CROSS NATL TIME SERI TSUTSUI K, 2008, SOC FORCES, V85, P331 Baldassarri D, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P735, DOI 10.1086/521839 Paxton P, 2007, SOC FORCES, V86, P47, DOI 10.1353/sof.2007.0107 Soss J, 2007, AM POLIT SCI REV, V101, P111, DOI 10.1017/S0003055407070049 Frank D. J., 2007, INT J COMP SOCIOL, V48, P275, DOI 10.1177/0020715207079530 Brulle Robert J., 2007, MOBILIZATION, V12, P195 Reger J, 2006, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V49, P297, DOI 10.1525/sop.2006.49.3.297 Fourcade M, 2006, AM J SOCIOL, V112, P145, DOI 10.1086/502693 Stark D, 2006, THEOR SOC, V35, P323, DOI 10.1007/s11186-006-9007-8 Andersen R, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P376 Ruiter S, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P191 Reimann KD, 2006, INT STUD QUART, V50, P45, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-2478.2006.00392.x MacKenzie D., 2006, ENGINE NOT CAMERA FI Meyer J., 2006, GLOBALIZATION ORG WO, P25 Sampson RJ, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P673, DOI 10.1086/497351 Schofer E, 2005, SOC FORCES, V84, P25, DOI 10.1353/sof.2005.0127 Barr A, 2005, WORLD DEV, V33, P657, DOI 10.1016/j.worlddev.2004.09.010 Plumper T, 2005, EUR J POLIT RES, V44, P327, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-6765.2005.00230.x BOLI J, 2005, INT J COMP SOCIOL, V46, P383, DOI 10.1177/0020715205058627 MINKOFF DC, 2005, MOBILIZATION INT J, V10, P401 HIRONAKA A, 2005, NEVERENDING WARS WEA KAGIA R, 2005, NEW DEV AGENDA TRANS Schofer E, 2004, SOC FORCES, V83, P215, DOI 10.1353/sof.2004.0125 Gerring J, 2004, BRIT J POLIT SCI, V34, P295, DOI 10.1017/S0007123404000067 Halaby CN, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P507, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.30.012703.110629 Andrews KT, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P479, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.30.012703.110542 Meyer DS, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P125, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.30.012703.110545 FOURCADE M, 2004, ANN C SOC SCI HIST A SALAMON LM, 2004, GLOBA CIVIL SOC DIME, V2 ANHEIER H, 2004, GLOBAL CIVIL SOC 200 Schofer E, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P730, DOI 10.2307/1519760 Schneider A, 2003, STUD COMP INT DEV, V38, P32, DOI 10.1007/BF02686198 Skocpol T., 2003, DIMINISHED DEMOCRACY Kaldor M, 2003, GLOBAL CIVIL SOC YB Schofer Evan, 2003, SCI MODERN WORLD POL DASGUPTA M, 2003, 2969 WORLD BANK DEV Campbell AL, 2002, AM POLIT SCI REV, V96, P565 Mettler S, 2002, AM POLIT SCI REV, V96, P351 Paxton P, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P254, DOI 10.2307/3088895 Jepperson RL, 2002, SOCIOL THEOR, V20, P61, DOI 10.1111/1467-9558.00151 Henderson SL, 2002, COMP POLIT STUD, V35, P139, DOI 10.1177/0010414002035002001 Wooldridge Jeffrey M., 2002, ECONOMETRIC ANAL CRO Hironaka A, 2002, INT J COMP SOCIOL, V43, P65, DOI 10.1177/002071520204300104 EDWARDS B, 2002, ANN M AM SOC ASS CHI UHLIN A, 2002, GLOBALIZATION DEMOCR, P149, DOI 10.4324/9780203361665_chapter_9 MINKOFF DC, 2002, METHODS SOCIAL MOVEM, P260 SIRI G, 2002, WORLD BANK CIVIL SOC OPITZ H, 2002, WORLD GUIDE SCI ASS Curtis JE, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P783, DOI 10.2307/3088873 Schofer E, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P806, DOI 10.2307/3088874 Crowley JE, 2001, AM J POLIT SCI, V45, P813, DOI 10.2307/2669326 Rothstein B, 2001, POLIT SOC, V29, P207, DOI 10.1177/0032329201029002003 Howell J., 2001, CIVIL SOC DEV CRITIC TRYZNA T, 2001, WORLD DIRECTORY ENV Sarkees MR, 2000, CONFLICT MANAG PEACE, V18, P123 Skocpol T, 2000, AM POLIT SCI REV, V94, P527, DOI 10.2307/2585829 Frank DJ, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P96, DOI 10.2307/2657291 Benford RD, 2000, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V26, P611, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.26.1.611 Putnam R. D., 2000, BOWLING ALONE COLLAP de Tocqueville A, 2000, DEMOCRACY AM Boli John, 1999, CONSTRUCTING WORLD C SCHOFER E, 1999, CONSTRUCTING WORLD C, P249 Skocpol T., 1999, CIVIC ENGAGEMENT AM Chabbott C, 1999, CONSTRUCTING WORLD C, P222 Blundell R, 1998, J ECONOMETRICS, V87, P115, DOI 10.1016/S0304-4076(98)00009-8 Tarrow S., 1998, POWER MOVEMENT SOCIA Keck Margaret, 1998, ACTIVISTS BORDERS AD Salamon L., 1998, VOLUNTAS, V9, P213, DOI 10.1023/A:1022058200985 ANHEIER HK, 1998, NONPROFIT SECTOR DEV Ramirez FO, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P735, DOI 10.2307/2657357 Meyer JW, 1997, INT ORGAN, V51, P623, DOI 10.1162/002081897550474 Meyer JW, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P144 Berman S, 1997, WORLD POLIT, V49, P401, DOI 10.1353/wp.1997.0008 Inglehart R, 1997, MODERNIZATION POSTMO Clemens Elisabeth S., 1997, PEOPLES LOBBY ORG IN TRIPP AM, 1997, CHANGING RULES POLIT AMENOMORI T, 1997, DEFINING NONPROFIT S, P188 LUNDSTROM T, 1997, DEFINING NONPROFIT S, P215 ATINGDUI L, 1997, DEFINING NONPROFIT S, P369 PONGSAPICH A, 1997, DEFINING NONPROFIT S, P446 McAdam D., 1996, COMP PERSPECTIVES SO Wapner Paul, 1996, ENV ACTIVISM WORLD C SALAMON LM, 1996, DEFINING NONPROFIT S JOYCE MS, 1996, EMPOWER PEOPLE STATE, P15 JAGGERS K, 1996, POLITY, V3 ARELLANO M, 1995, J ECONOMETRICS, V68, P29, DOI 10.1016/0304-4076(94)01642-D BRADY HE, 1995, AM POLIT SCI REV, V89, P271, DOI 10.2307/2082425 NELSON Paul, 1995, WORLD BANK NONGOVERN WEIR M, 1995, NEW MAJORITY POPULAR, P149 CHAZAN N, 1994, STATE POWER SOCIAL F, P255 PIERSON P, 1993, WORLD POLIT, V45, P595, DOI 10.2307/2950710 Putnam R, 1993, MAKING DEMOCRACY WOR HAAS PM, 1992, INT ORGAN, V46, P1 TILLY C, 1992, STUDIES SOCIAL DISCO JEPPERSON R, 1992, THESIS YALE U CALDWELL L, 1990, 2 WORLDS SCI ENV MOV ORUM AM, 1989, INTRO POLITICAL SOCI GURR T, 1989, POLITY, V2 Thomas G. M., 1987, I STRUCTURE CONSTITU Tilly Charles, 1985, BRINGING STATE BACK, P169, DOI DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511628283.008 NICKELL S, 1981, ECONOMETRICA, V49, P1417, DOI 10.2307/1911408 INKELES AD, 1976, BECOMING MODERN INDI Almond G., 1963, CIVIC CULTURE *UIA, YB INT ORG NR 120 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD SEP PY 2011 VL 117 IS 2 BP 539 EP 585 DI 10.1086/661593 PG 47 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 835PK UT WOS:000296048100004 ER PT J AU Tilcsik, A AF Tilcsik, Andras TI Pride and Prejudice: Employment Discrimination against Openly Gay Men in the United States SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID SEXUAL ORIENTATION DISCRIMINATION; GENDER STEREOTYPES; FIELD EXPERIMENT; WAGE DIFFERENCES; LABOR-MARKET; EARNINGS; WOMEN; ATTITUDES; PENALTY; PEOPLE AB This article presents the first large-scale audit study of discrimination against openly gay men in the United States. Pairs of fictitious resumes were sent in response to 1,769 job postings in seven states. One resume in each pair was randomly assigned experience in a gay campus organization, and the other resume was assigned a control organization. Two main findings have emerged. First, in some but not all states, there was significant discrimination against the fictitious applicants who appeared to be gay. This geographic variation in the level of discrimination appears to reflect regional differences in attitudes and antidiscrimination laws. Second, employers who emphasized the importance of stereotypically male heterosexual traits were particularly likely to discriminate against openly gay men. Beyond these particular findings, this study advances the audit literature more generally by covering multiple regions and by highlighting how audit techniques may be used to identify stereotypes that affect employment decisions in real labor markets. C1 Harvard Univ, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA. RP Tilcsik, A (reprint author), Harvard Univ, 2680 Harvard Yard, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA EM tilcsik@fas.harvard.edu CR Pager D, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P777 Lax JR, 2009, AM POLIT SCI REV, V103, P367, DOI 10.1017/S0003055409990050 Drydakis N, 2009, LABOUR ECON, V16, P364, DOI 10.1016/j.labeco.2008.12.003 Ridgeway CL, 2009, GENDER SOC, V23, P145, DOI 10.1177/0891243208330313 RIVERA LA, 2009, THESIS HARVARD U Antecol H, 2008, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V61, P518 WARD J, 2008, ENCY GENDER SOC, V1, P491 Correll SJ, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V112, P1297, DOI 10.1086/511799 Pager D, 2007, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V609, P104, DOI 10.1177/0002716206294796 Badgett M.V.L., 2007, BIAS WORKPLACE CONSI Morrison TG, 2007, J HOMOSEXUAL, V52, P63, DOI 10.1300/J082v52n03_04 Carpenter CS, 2007, LABOUR ECON, V14, P25, DOI 10.1016/j.labeco.2005.06.001 HERSZENHORN D, 2007, NY TIMES 1108 Udry JR, 2006, J BIOSOC SCI, V38, P797, DOI 10.1017/S002193200500101X Quillian L, 2006, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V32, P299, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.32.061604.123132 Riach P. A, 2006, BE PRESS ADV EC ANAL, V6, P1 Gorman EH, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P702 Connell R, 2005, MASCULINITIES SAAD L, 2005, GAY RIGHTS ATTITUDES HULL K, 2005, HDB EMPLOYMENT DISCR, P167, DOI 10.1007/978-0-387-09467-0_8 *LAMBD LEG, 2005, SUMM STAT CIT COUNT Bertrand M, 2004, AM ECON REV, V94, P991, DOI 10.1257/0002828042002561 Petersen T, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P852, DOI 10.1086/378536 Blank R. M., 2004, MEASURING RACIAL DIS Weichselbaumer Doris, 2004, E ECON J, V30, P159 Weichselbaumer D, 2003, LABOUR ECON, V10, P629, DOI 10.1016/S0927-5371(03)00074-5 Blandford JM, 2003, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V56, P622, DOI 10.2307/3590960 Black DA, 2003, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V56, P449, DOI 10.2307/3590918 Horvath M, 2003, SEX ROLES, V48, P115, DOI 10.1023/A:1022499121222 PINELLO DR, 2003, GAY RIGHTS AM LAW PAGER D, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V18, P937 *COOK COUNT COMM H, 2003, COOK COUNT COMM HUM *PEW RES CTR, 2003, REL BEL UND OPP HOM ARMOUR S, 2003, US TODAY 0720 Berg N, 2002, CONTEMP ECON POLICY, V20, P394, DOI 10.1093/cep/20.4.394 Hebl MR, 2002, PERS SOC PSYCHOL B, V28, P815, DOI 10.1177/0146167202289010 Padavic I., 2002, WOMEN MEN WORK HAEBERLE S, 2002, ANN M AM POL SCI ASS BANAJI M, 2002, INT ENCY SOCIAL BEHA, P15100 Rudman LA, 2001, J SOC ISSUES, V57, P743, DOI 10.1111/0022-4537.00239 Rubenstein WB, 2001, SOUTH CALIF LAW REV, V75, P65 Allegretto SA, 2001, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V54, P631, DOI 10.2307/2695994 Clain SH, 2001, APPL ECON, V33, P37, DOI 10.1080/00036840122961 GILBERT D, 2001, HAMILTON COLL GAY IS BADGETT MVL, 2001, MONEY MYTHS CHANGE E RESKIN B, 2001, ROUTLEDGE INT ENCY W, P1891 Davison HK, 2000, J VOCAT BEHAV, V56, P225, DOI 10.1006/jvbe.1999.1711 Bendick M Jr, 1999, J Aging Soc Policy, V10, P5 Klawitter MM, 1998, J POLICY ANAL MANAG, V17, P658, DOI 10.1002/(SICI)1520-6688(199823)17:4<658::AID-PAM4>3.0.CO;2-P Heckman JJ, 1998, J ECON PERSPECT, V12, P101 Fiske S. T., 1998, HDB SOCIAL PSYCHOL, V2, P357 Webster M, 1998, ADV GROUP, V15, P1 Madon S, 1997, SEX ROLES, V37, P663, DOI 10.1007/BF02936334 BADGETT MVL, 1997, ANGLES POLICY J I GA, V2, P1 Neal DA, 1996, J POLIT ECON, V104, P869, DOI 10.1086/262045 Farkas G, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P557, DOI 10.2307/2096392 Croteau JM, 1996, J VOCAT BEHAV, V48, P195, DOI 10.1006/jvbe.1996.0018 FRISKOPP A, 1996, STRAIGHT JOBS GAY LI BADGETT MVL, 1995, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V48, P726, DOI 10.2307/2524353 JOHNSON C, 1995, ADV GROUP PROCESSES, V12, P115 LEAPE MP, 1995, HARVARD GUIDE CAREER HADDOCK G, 1993, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V65, P1105, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.65.6.1105 BANAJI MR, 1993, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V65, P272, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.65.2.272 WOODS J, 1993, CORPORATE CLOSET PRO Jencks C, 1992, RETHINKING SOCIAL PO BADGETT MVL, 1992, PERVASIVE PATTERNS D JACKSON LA, 1989, J SOC PSYCHOL, V129, P659 CROW SM, 1988, EMPLOYEE RESPONSIBIL, V11, P15 KING D, 1988, SIGNS, V14, P88 PAGE S, 1986, Journal of Homosexuality, V12, P109, DOI 10.1300/J082v12n01_06 Burstein Paul, 1985, DISCRIMINATION JOBS STOKES K, 1983, ARCH SEX BEHAV, V12, P427, DOI 10.1007/BF01542886 ADAM BD, 1981, CAN REV SOC ANTHROP, V18, P216 GURWITZ SB, 1978, J APPL SOC PSYCHOL, V90, P173 Berger J., 1977, STATUS CHARACTERISTI BEM SL, 1974, J CONSULT CLIN PSYCH, V42, P155, DOI 10.1037/h0036215 Arrow K. J., 1973, DISCRIMINATION LABOR, P3 Cohen J, 1969, STAT POWER ANAL BEHA NR 78 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD SEP PY 2011 VL 117 IS 2 BP 586 EP 626 DI 10.1086/661653 PG 41 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 835PK UT WOS:000296048100005 ER PT J AU Schneider, D AF Schneider, Daniel TI Wealth and the Marital Divide SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID UNION FORMATION; ASSET ACCUMULATION; UNITED-STATES; FAMILY-STRUCTURE; ETHNIC-DIFFERENCES; ECONOMIC HARDSHIP; YOUNG MEN; MARRIAGE; RELIGION; CHILDREN AB Marriage patterns differ dramatically in the United States by race and education. The author identifies a novel explanation for these marital divides, namely, the important role of personal wealth in marriage entry. Using event-history models and data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 cohort, the author shows that wealth is an important predictor of first marriage and that differences in asset ownership by race and education help to explain a significant portion of the race and education gaps in first marriage. The article also tests possible explanations for why wealth plays an important role in first marriage entry. C1 Princeton Univ, Off Populat Res, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA. RP Schneider, D (reprint author), Princeton Univ, Off Populat Res, 284 Wallace Hall, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA EM djschnei@princeton.edu CR DEW J, 2011, J FAMILY EC ISSUES, V32, P434 Mood C, 2010, EUR SOCIOL REV, V26, P67, DOI 10.1093/esr/jcp006 Gibson-Davis CM, 2009, J MARRIAGE FAM, V71, P146, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2008.00586.x TEITLER J, 2009, J MARRIAGE FAM, V71, P892 McGrath DM, 2008, WORK OCCUPATION, V35, P196, DOI 10.1177/0730888407312275 Nam Y, 2008, SOC SCI QUART, V89, P133 JACOBS E, 2008, LAID LAID LOW Wilcox WB, 2007, SOC SCI RES, V36, P569, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2006.02.005 Burstein NR, 2007, J POLICY ANAL MANAG, V26, P387, DOI 10.1002/pam.20257 Massey D. S, 2007, CATEGORICALLY UNEQUA SCHNEIDER D, 2007, FINANCING LOW INCOME KEISTER L, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P1237 JACOBS E, 2007, 12 BROOK I Western Bruce, 2006, PUNISHMENT INEQUALIT Yamokoski A, 2006, FEM ECON, V12, P167, DOI 10.1080/13545700500508478 DiPrete TA, 2006, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V32, P271, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.32.061604.123127 Hacker Jacob S., 2006, GREAT RISK SHIFT Arthur B.Kennickell, 2006, FEDERAL RESERVE B, V92, pA1 FISCHER C, 2006, CENTURY DIFFERENCE Gibson-Davis CM, 2005, J MARRIAGE FAM, V67, P1301, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2005.00218.x Edin K, 2005, FUTURE CHILD, V15, P117, DOI 10.1353/foc.2005.0017 Thomas A, 2005, FUTURE CHILD, V15, P57, DOI 10.1353/foc.2005.0020 Qian ZC, 2005, SOC FORCES, V84, P473, DOI 10.1353/sof.2005.0117 Smock PJ, 2005, J MARRIAGE FAM, V67, P680, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2005.00162.x Kalmijn M, 2005, POP STUD-J DEMOG, V59, P211, DOI 10.1080/00324720500099587 Chang ML, 2005, SOC FORCES, V83, P1469, DOI 10.1353/sof.2005.0061 Edin K., 2005, PROMISES I CAN KEEP MAMUN A, 2005, WHITE PICKET FENCE D Harknett K, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P790 McLanahan S, 2004, DEMOGRAPHY, V41, P607, DOI 10.1353/dem.2004.0033 Cherlin AJ, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P848, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00058.x Edin K, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P1007, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00072.x Carlson M, 2004, POPUL RES POLICY REV, V23, P513, DOI 10.1007/s11113-004-2707-8 Kopczuk W, 2004, NATL TAX J, V57, P445 Keister LA, 2004, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V47, P161, DOI 10.1525/sop.2004.47.2.161 Carlson M, 2004, DEMOGRAPHY, V41, P237, DOI 10.1353/dem.2004.0012 Lehrer EL, 2004, POPUL RES POLICY REV, V23, P161, DOI 10.1023/B:POPU.0000019917.00860.ba Sassler S, 2004, J FAM ISSUES, V25, P139, DOI 10.1177/0192513X03257708 ELLWOOD D, 2004, FUTURE FAMILY LICHTER D, 2004, MARRIAGE FAMILY MULT ELLWOOD D, 2004, SOCIAL INEQUALITY SCHOLZ JK, 2004, SOCIAL INEQUALITY RIBAR D, 2004, 998 IZA Keister LA, 2003, SOC FORCES, V82, P175, DOI 10.1353/sof.2003.0094 Waite LJ, 2003, POPUL DEV REV, V29, P255, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4457.2003.00255.x Xie Y, 2003, DEMOGRAPHY, V40, P351, DOI 10.2307/3180805 Ziliak JP, 2003, REV ECON STAT, V85, P63, DOI 10.1162/003465303762687712 Stewart SD, 2003, J MARRIAGE FAM, V65, P90, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2003.00090.x Lupton J. P., 2003, Marriage and the economy: Theory and evidence from advanced industrial societies BAUM S, 2003, NASFAA J STUDENT FIN, V3, P7 EDIN K, 2003, NAT POV CTR ANN RES Graefe DR, 2002, PERSPECT SEX REPRO H, V34, P286, DOI 10.2307/3097747 Sweeney MM, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P132, DOI 10.2307/3088937 Lamont M, 2002, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V28, P167, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.28.110601.141107 Simon RW, 2002, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P1065, DOI 10.1086/339225 SIGLERUSHTON W, 2002, POPULATION, V57, P509, DOI 10.2307/3246637 Wilson J. Q, 2002, MARRIAGE PROBLEM OUR Goldstein JR, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P506, DOI 10.2307/3088920 Teachman JD, 2000, J MARRIAGE FAM, V62, P1234, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2000.01234.x Steensland B, 2000, SOC FORCES, V79, P291, DOI 10.2307/2675572 Keister LA, 2000, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V26, P63, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.26.1.63 FITCH C, 2000, TIES BIND RALEY RK, 2000, TIES BIND PERSPECTIV Brien MJ, 1999, DEMOGRAPHY, V36, P535, DOI 10.2307/2648089 Clarkberg M, 1999, SOC FORCES, V77, P945, DOI 10.2307/3005967 Conley D., 1999, BEING BLACK LIVING R Conger RD, 1999, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V76, P54, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.76.1.54 Hurst E., 1998, BROOKINGS PAPERS EC, V1, P267 MOFFIT R, 1998, WELFARE FAMILY REPRO Oppenheimer VK, 1997, DEMOGRAPHY, V34, P311, DOI 10.2307/3038286 Cornwell C, 1997, ECON INQ, V35, P285 Zelizer V.A., 1997, SOCIAL MEANING MONEY Lloyd KM, 1996, SOC FORCES, V74, P1097, DOI 10.2307/2580394 Waite LJ, 1995, DEMOGRAPHY, V32, P483, DOI 10.2307/2061670 HUBBARD RG, 1995, J POLIT ECON, V103, P360, DOI 10.1086/261987 LILLARD LA, 1995, AM J SOCIOL, V100, P1131, DOI 10.1086/230634 Oliver M. L., 1995, BLACK WEALTH WHITE W BENNETT N, 1995, DEMOGRAPHY, V32, P692 TEACHMAN JD, 1994, J MARRIAGE FAM, V56, P415, DOI 10.2307/353109 RUGGLES S, 1994, AM SOCIOL REV, V59, P136, DOI 10.2307/2096137 SOUTH SJ, 1993, J MARRIAGE FAM, V55, P357, DOI 10.2307/352807 BULCROFT RA, 1993, J MARRIAGE FAM, V55, P338, DOI 10.2307/352806 KORENMAN S, 1991, J HUM RESOUR, V26, P282, DOI 10.2307/145924 ROSS CE, 1990, J MARRIAGE FAM, V52, P1059, DOI 10.2307/353319 CONGER RD, 1990, J MARRIAGE FAM, V52, P643, DOI 10.2307/352931 BENNETT NG, 1989, AM J SOCIOL, V95, P692, DOI 10.1086/229330 OPPENHEIMER VK, 1988, AM J SOCIOL, V94, P563, DOI 10.1086/229030 UMBERSON D, 1987, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V28, P306, DOI 10.2307/2136848 GOLDSCHEIDER FK, 1987, J MARRIAGE FAM, V49, P507, DOI 10.2307/352196 Wilson W. J., 1987, TRULY DISADVANTAGED GOLDSCHEIDER FK, 1986, AM J SOCIOL, V92, P91, DOI 10.1086/228464 Allison P, 1984, EVENT HIST ANAL WINSHIP C, 1984, AM SOCIOL REV, V49, P512, DOI 10.2307/2095465 LIKER JK, 1983, AM SOCIOL REV, V48, P343, DOI 10.2307/2095227 Becker Gary S., 1981, TREATISE FAMILY HILL MS, 1979, J HUM RESOUR, V14, P579, DOI 10.2307/145325 SEUSS DR., 1961, THEORY LEISURE CLASS, P12 NR 97 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD SEP PY 2011 VL 117 IS 2 BP 627 EP 667 DI 10.1086/661594 PG 41 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 835PK UT WOS:000296048100006 ER PT J AU O'Rand, AM AF O'Rand, Angela M. TI 2010 SSS Presidential Address: The Devolution of Risk and the Changing Life Course in the United States SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID RETIREMENT INCOME; WORKERS AB Recent patterns of labor exit in late life in the United States are increasingly heterogeneous. This heterogeneity stems from diverse employment careers that are emerging in the workplace where job security is declining. Individuals' structural locations in the labor market expose them to diverse risks for employment and income security at older ages. Among those risks are access to institutional mechanisms for retirement saving and the requirement to assume full responsibility for decisions about retirement savings that involve market risks. The spread of these individualized pressures to invest in retirement has elevated the importance of financial literacy in the 21(st) century. Late employment careers and patterns of financial literacy are studied in this article using the premier U.S. longitudinal dataset from the National Institute of Aging, the Health and Retirement Study initiated in 1992, which is linked to restricted Social Security earnings records that extend over several decades. These merged data afford the opportunity to observe continuous work histories in this sample from 1981 through 2006 to identify latent trajectories of employment in late life. In addition, a supplementary module attached to the 2004 wave of the HRS provides valuable information on the financial literacy of subgroups. The work-retirement trajectories and financial literacy patterns observed reflect persistent patterns of inequality amplified by modern risks in the labor market. C1 Duke Univ, Durham, NC 27708 USA. RP O'Rand, AM (reprint author), Duke Univ, Box 90029, Durham, NC 27708 USA EM aorand@soc.duke.edu CR Toossi M, 2009, MON LABOR REV, V132, P30 Kalleberg AL, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P1 Akerlof GA, 2009, ANIMAL SPIRITS: HOW HUMAN PSYCHOLOGY DRIVES THE ECONOMY, AND WHY IT MATTERS FOR GLOBAL CAPITALISM, P1 Johnson RW, 2009, RES AGING, V31, P3, DOI 10.1177/0164027508325001 ORAND AM, 2009, INT HDB DEMOGRAPHY A, P429, DOI 10.1007/978-1-4020-8356-3_19 *US DEP LAB, 2009, LAB FORC STAT CURR P GUSTMAN AL, 2009, RES AGING, V3, P261 Brown TH, 2008, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V63, pS122 Vermunt J. K., 2008, HDB LONGITUDINAL RES, P373 KARP F, 2008, GROWING OLDER AM HLT Taleb Nassim, 2007, BLACK SWAN IMPACT HI Lusardi A, 2007, J MONETARY ECON, V54, P205, DOI 10.1016/j.jmoneco.2006.12.001 MADRIAN B, 2007, REDEFINING RETIREMEN Thompson LH, 2006, OXFORD REV ECON POL, V22, P95, DOI 10.1093/oxrep/grj007 Hacker J., 2006, GREAT RISK SHIFT ASS Nagin D. S., 2005, GROUP BASED MODELING FLIPPEN CA, 2005, NEW POLITICS OLD AGE, P129 MAESTAS N, 2005, WR1961 RAND LAB POP Munnell A. H., 2004, COMING SHORT CHALLEN Shuey KM, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P453, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.30.012703.110534 Hughes M. E., 2004, LIVES TIMES BABY BOO Burtless G, 2004, ESRI STUD SER AGEING, P227 WARNER D, 2004, GLOBALIZATION UNCERT, P141 VERMUNT JK, 2004, SAGE HDB QUANTITATIV, P175 Institute of Medicine, 2003, HIDD COSTS VAL LOST Elman C, 2002, SOC SCI RES, V31, P49, DOI 10.1006/ssre.2001.0718 BURTLESS G, 2002, IS WORKING LONGER AN Quinn JF, 2002, POLICIES FOR AN AGING SOCIETY, P293 JACOBY SM, 2001, SOURCEBOOK LABOR MAR, P31 HINZ R, 2000, PRIVATE PENSION SYST, V1 Esping-Andersen G., 1999, SOCIAL FDN POSTINDUS LEVY F, 1998, NEW DOLLARS DREAMS Bandeen-Roche K, 1997, J AM STAT ASSOC, V92, P1375, DOI 10.2307/2965407 QUINN JF, 1997, PUBLIC POLICY AGING, V8, P10 BERNSTEIN PETER L., 1996, GODS REMARKABLE STOR Epstein Richard A., 2005, J ECON PERSPECT, V93, P1361 HEIMER CA, 1988, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V14, P491, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.14.1.491 Douglas M., 1986, I THINK KAHNEMAN D, 1979, ECONOMETRICA, V47, P263, DOI 10.2307/1914185 MARCH JG, 1978, BELL J ECON, V9, P587, DOI 10.2307/3003600 ORAND AM, AGEING POPU IN PRESS NR 41 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD SEP PY 2011 VL 90 IS 1 BP 1 EP 16 PG 16 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 809EY UT WOS:000294035800001 ER PT J AU Gebel, M Giesecke, J AF Gebel, Michael Giesecke, Johannes TI Labor Market Flexibility and Inequality: The Changing Skill-Based Temporary Employment and Unemployment Risks in Europe SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID PROTECTION; AMERICA; SPAIN; WORK; JOBS; BAD AB In this article we use comparative micro data for 15 European countries covering the period 1992-2007 to study the impact of labor market reforms on the skill-related individual risk of holding a temporary contract and the risk of being unemployed. Our results indicate no general increase in either of these skill gaps. Using two-step multilevel analyses, we show that in the case of high protection of regular contracts, lowering restrictions on the use of temporary contracts increases the relative temporary employment rates of low-skilled workers. However, this kind of partial deregulation, which has been implemented in the majority of Western European countries, has not translated into decreasing unemployment risks of the low-skilled vis-a-vis medium- and highly-skilled persons. C1 [Giesecke, Johannes] Univ Bamberg, Lehrstuhl Soziol, D-96045 Bamberg, Germany. [Gebel, Michael] Univ Mannheim, D-6800 Mannheim 1, Germany. RP Giesecke, J (reprint author), Univ Bamberg, Lehrstuhl Soziol, Feldkirchenstr 21, D-96045 Bamberg, Germany EM johannes.giesecke@uni-bamberg.de CR World Bank, 2010, WORLD DEV IND Kahn LM, 2010, LABOUR ECON, V17, P1, DOI 10.1016/j.labeco.2009.05.001 *OECD, 2010, OECD STAT EXTR DAT Barbieri P, 2009, EUR SOCIOL REV, V25, P621, DOI 10.1093/esr/jcp020 Barbieri P, 2009, EUR SOCIOL REV, V25, P677, DOI 10.1093/esr/jcp009 Mills M, 2009, EUR SOCIOL REV, V25, P1, DOI 10.1093/esr/jcn046 Venn D., 2009, LEGISLATION COLLECTI Visser J., 2009, ICTWSS DATABASE I CH Dreher Axel, 2008, MEASURING GLOBALISAT Kahn LM, 2007, ECON J, V117, pF333 Gash V., 2007, SOCIO-ECON REV, V5, P467 *EUR, 2007, LAB FORC SURV AN DAT Polavieja JG, 2006, EUR SOCIOL REV, V22, P61, DOI 10.1093/esr/jci042 DIPRETE TA, 2006, RES SOCIAL STRATIFIC, V24, P311, DOI 10.1016/j.rssm.2006.04.001 Lewis JB, 2005, POLIT ANAL, V13, P345, DOI 10.1093/pan/mpi026 Franzese RJ, 2005, POLIT ANAL, V13, P430, DOI 10.1093/pan/mpi024 Maurin E, 2005, WORK OCCUPATION, V32, P229, DOI 10.1177/0730888405274603 Diprete TA, 2005, WORK OCCUPATION, V32, P119, DOI 10.1177/0730888405274511 POLAVIEJA JG, 2005, SOCIO-ECON REV, V3, P233, DOI 10.1093/SER/mwi010 OECD, 2004, EMPL OUTL Giesecke J, 2004, EUR SOC, V6, P347, DOI 10.1080/1461669042000231456 Polavieja JG, 2003, EUR SOCIOL REV, V19, P501, DOI 10.1093/esr/19.5.501 Giesecke J, 2003, EUR SOCIOL REV, V19, P161, DOI 10.1093/esr/19.2.161 Booth AL, 2002, ECON J, V112, pF181, DOI 10.1111/1468-0297.00044 Holmlund B, 2002, ECON J, V112, pF245, DOI 10.1111/1468-0297.00042 Acemoglu D, 2002, J ECON LIT, V40, P7, DOI 10.1257/0022051026976 Cahuc P, 2002, LABOUR ECON, V9, P63, DOI 10.1016/S0927-5371(01)00051-3 Blanchard O., 2002, ECON J, V112, P214 BLAU FD, 2002, HOME ABROAD US LABOR Korpi T, 2001, WORK EMPLOY SOC, V15, P127, DOI 10.1017/S095001700100006X Kalleberg AL, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P256, DOI 10.2307/2657440 Goldthorpe John H., 2000, SOCIOLOGY NUMBERS NA ESPINGANDERSEN G, 2000, WHY DEREGULATE LABOU, P66 GUELL M, 2000, IND RELATIONS SECTIO, V433 Breen R, 1997, SOCIOLOGY, V31, P473, DOI 10.1177/0038038597031003006 Nickell S, 1997, J ECON PERSPECT, V11, P55 BENTOLILA S, 1990, REV ECON STUD, V57, P381, DOI 10.2307/2298020 Coleman J.S, 1990, FDN SOCIAL THEORY Lindbeck Assar, 1988, INSIDER OUTSIDER THE NR 39 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD SEP PY 2011 VL 90 IS 1 BP 17 EP 39 PG 23 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 809EY UT WOS:000294035800002 ER PT J AU Harknett, K Kuperberg, A AF Harknett, Kristen Kuperberg, Arielle TI Education, Labor Markets and the Retreat from Marriage SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID INCOME SINGLE MOTHERS; ECONOMIC CIRCUMSTANCES; FAMILY INSTABILITY; MARITAL QUALITY; UNION FORMATION; COHABITATION; DECISIONS; OUTCOMES; DECADES; 1990S AB Using data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing study and the Current Population Survey, we find that labor market conditions play a large role in explaining the positive relationship between educational attainment and marriage. Our results suggest that if low-educated parents enjoyed the same, stronger labor market conditions as their more-educated counterparts, then differences in marriage by education would narrow considerably. Better labor markets are positively related to marriage for fathers at all educational levels. In contrast, better labor markets are positively related to marriage for less-educated mothers but not their more-educated counterparts. We discuss the implications of our findings for theories about women's earning power and marriage, the current economic recession and future studies of differences in family structure across education groups. C1 [Harknett, Kristen] Univ Penn, Dept Sociol, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA. [Kuperberg, Arielle] Univ N Carolina, Greensboro, NC 27412 USA. RP Harknett, K (reprint author), Univ Penn, Dept Sociol, 271 McNeil Bldg,3718 Locust Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA EM harknett@sas.upenn.edu CR Ventura S. J, 2009, CHANGING PATTERNS NO LIMING D, 2008, OCCUPATIONAL OUTLOOK MCLANAHAN, 2008, SOCIOLOGY, V34, P257 Osborne C, 2007, J MARRIAGE FAM, V69, P1065, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2007.00431.x Entwisle B, 2007, DEMOGRAPHY, V44, P687, DOI 10.1353/dem.2007.0045 Fomby P, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P181 Burstein NR, 2007, J POLICY ANAL MANAG, V26, P387, DOI 10.1002/pam.20257 Blossfeld Hans-Peter, 2007, EVENT HIST ANAL STAT Furstenberg FF, 2007, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V33, P429, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.33.040406.131727 Duncan GJ, 2006, DEMOGRAPHY, V43, P691, DOI 10.1353/dem.2006.0032 Cavanagh SE, 2006, SOC FORCES, V85, P551, DOI 10.1353/sof.2006.0120 Schoen R, 2006, J MARRIAGE FAM, V68, P1, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2006.00229.x GASSMANPINES, 2006, J POLICY ANAL MANAG, V25, P11 Gibson-Davis CM, 2005, J MARRIAGE FAM, V67, P1301, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2005.00218.x Smock PJ, 2005, J MARRIAGE FAM, V67, P680, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2005.00162.x Edin K., 2005, PROMISES I CAN KEEP McLanahan S, 2004, DEMOGRAPHY, V41, P607, DOI 10.1353/dem.2004.0033 Sweeney MM, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P1015, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00073.x Carlson M, 2004, DEMOGRAPHY, V41, P237, DOI 10.1353/dem.2004.0012 Brown SL, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P351, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2004.00025.x Ellwood D., 2004, FUTURE FAMILY, P25 Manning WD, 2003, J MARRIAGE FAM, V65, P876, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2003.00876.x Harknett K, 2003, DEMOGRAPHY, V40, P451, DOI 10.2307/1515155 Xie Y, 2003, DEMOGRAPHY, V40, P351, DOI 10.2307/3180805 Ono H, 2003, J MARRIAGE FAM, V65, P275, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2003.00275.x Lichter DT, 2002, SOC SCI RES, V31, P230, DOI 10.1006/ssre.2001.0728 Sweeney MM, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P132, DOI 10.2307/3088937 Thornton A, 2001, J MARRIAGE FAM, V63, P1009, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.01009.x Carlson MJ, 2001, J MARRIAGE FAM, V63, P779, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.00779.x Goldstein JR, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P506, DOI 10.2307/3088920 White L, 2000, J MARRIAGE FAM, V62, P1035, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2000.01035.x Blau FD, 2000, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V53, P624, DOI 10.2307/2696140 Edin K, 2000, SOC PROBL, V47, P112, DOI 10.1525/sp.2000.47.1.03x0282v Zavodny M, 1999, J MARRIAGE FAM, V61, P764, DOI 10.2307/353576 Rogers SJ, 1999, J MARRIAGE FAM, V61, P123, DOI 10.2307/353888 Smock PJ, 1997, DEMOGRAPHY, V34, P331, DOI 10.2307/3038287 Durkheim E., 1997, SUICIDE Lillard LA, 1996, DEMOGRAPHY, V33, P313, DOI 10.2307/2061764 Waite LJ, 1995, DEMOGRAPHY, V32, P483, DOI 10.2307/2061670 Allison P.D, 1995, SURVIVAL ANAL USING ASHENFELTER O, 1994, AM ECON REV, V84, P1157 Conger R. D., 1994, FAMILIES TROUBLED TI McLanahan Sara, 1994, GROWING SINGLE PAREN Cherlin A, 1992, MARRIAGE DIVORCE REM VOYDANOFF P, 1990, J MARRIAGE FAM, V52, P1099, DOI 10.2307/353321 CONGER RD, 1990, J MARRIAGE FAM, V52, P643, DOI 10.2307/352931 Coleman J.S, 1990, FDN SOCIAL THEORY Anderson E., 1990, STREETWISE RACE CLAS SAMPSON RJ, 1989, AM J SOCIOL, V94, P774, DOI 10.1086/229068 TESTA M, 1989, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V501, P79, DOI 10.1177/0002716289501001005 OPPENHEIMER, 1988, SOCIOLOGY, V94, P563 Wilson W. J., 1987, TRULY DISADVANTAGED JOHNSON WR, 1986, AM ECON REV, V76, P455 Guttentag M., 1983, TOO MANY WOMEN SEX R HANNAN MT, 1977, AM J SOCIOL, V82, P1186, DOI 10.1086/226463 Elder G. H., 1974, CHILDREN GREAT DEPRE OGBURN WF, 1955, TECHNOLOGY CHANGING Komarovsky Mirra, 1940, UNEMPLOYED MAN HIS F Ogburn W. F., 1922, J AM STAT ASSOC, V18, P324, DOI 10.2307/2276951 NR 59 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD SEP PY 2011 VL 90 IS 1 BP 41 EP 63 PG 23 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 809EY UT WOS:000294035800003 ER PT J AU Hallerod, B AF Hallerod, Bjorn TI What Do Children Know About Their Futures: Do Children's Expectations Predict Outcomes in Middle Age? SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID STOCKHOLM BIRTH COHORT; SELF-ESTEEM; SOCIOECONOMIC INEQUALITIES; ECONOMIC HARDSHIP; SOCIAL ASSISTANCE; STEREOTYPES; ADOLESCENTS; HEALTH; LIFE; STIGMA AB Are children's statements about their futures related to outcomes in middle age? In 1966 almost 13,500 children ages 12-13 were asked whether they thought their futures would be worse, similar or better as compared to others of their own age. It was shown that children with low, and surprisingly high, expectations did suffer from increased mortality, economic hardship and weak labor market attachment risks in middle age. Although it cannot be ruled out that expectations worked as self-fulfilling prophesies, the analyses showed that expectations essentially reflected facts known to the children (i.e., upbringing conditions and their own abilities and achievements). C1 Univ Gothenburg, Dept Sociol, S-40530 Gothenburg, Sweden. RP Hallerod, B (reprint author), Univ Gothenburg, Dept Sociol, Box 720, S-40530 Gothenburg, Sweden EM bjorn.hallerod@sociology.gu.se CR VINNERLJUNG B, 2010, SOCIAL RAPPORT 2010, P227 Hinnant JB, 2009, J EDUC PSYCHOL, V101, P662, DOI 10.1037/a0014306 Borowsky IW, 2009, PEDIATRICS, V124, pE81, DOI 10.1542/peds.2008-3425 Hattie J, 2009, VISIBLE LEARNING SYN Mickelson KD, 2008, J SOC CLIN PSYCHOL, V27, P903, DOI 10.1521/jscp.2008.27.9.903 Renkema LJ, 2008, PERS SOC PSYCHOL B, V34, P553, DOI 10.1177/0146167207312465 Hallerod B, 2008, INT J SOC WELF, V17, P15, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-2397.2007.00503.x Stenberg SA, 2007, SCAND J PUBLIC HEALT, V35, P104, DOI 10.1080/14034940600777385 Wagmiller RL, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P847 Stenberg SA, 2006, INT J EPIDEMIOL, V35, P546, DOI 10.1093/ije/dyi310 Dundas R, 2006, INT J EPIDEMIOL, V35, P458, DOI 10.1093/ije/dyi239 Lyons A, 2006, ASIAN J SOC PSYCHOL, V9, P59, DOI 10.1111/j.1367-2223.2006.00184.x Flouri E, 2006, BRIT J EDUC PSYCHOL, V76, P41, DOI 10.1348/000709905X52508 Hallerod B, 2006, ACTA SOCIOL, V49, P83, DOI 10.1177/0001699306061901 Cohen GL, 2005, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V89, P566, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.89.4.566 Sobolewski JM, 2005, J MARRIAGE FAM, V67, P141, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2005.00011.x Major B, 2005, ANNU REV PSYCHOL, V56, P393, DOI 10.1146/annurev.psych.56.091103.070137 Bartus Tamas, 2005, STATA J, V5, P309 Klein O, 2004, CAH PSYCHOL COGN, V22, P463 Hallerod B, 2004, SOC FORCES, V83, P35, DOI 10.1353/sof.2004.0112 Wong CA, 2003, J PERS, V71, P1197, DOI 10.1111/1467-6494.7106012 Oyserman D, 2003, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V66, P333, DOI 10.2307/1519833 Kinnunen U, 2003, PERS INDIV DIFFER, V35, P617, DOI 10.1016/S0191-8869(02)00223-4 Kunda Z, 2003, PSYCHOL BULL, V129, P522, DOI 10.1037/0033-2909.129.4.522 McKown C, 2003, CHILD DEV, V74, P498, DOI 10.1111/1467-8624.7402012 Harris KM, 2002, SOC FORCES, V80, P1005, DOI 10.1353/sof.2002.0008 Chen ZY, 2001, J MARRIAGE FAM, V63, P17, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.00017.x Link BG, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P363, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.27.1.363 HALLEROD B, 2001, EMPLOYMENT UNEMPLOYM, P123 *SOU, 2001, VALF 1990 TAL Halldorsson M, 2000, EUR J PUBLIC HEALTH, V10, P281, DOI 10.1093/eurpub/10.4.281 Stenberg SA, 2000, J MARRIAGE FAM, V62, P228, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2000.00228.x Branscombe NR, 1999, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V77, P135, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.77.1.135 O'Donoghue T, 1999, AM ECON REV, V89, P103, DOI 10.1257/aer.89.1.103 SHAWN M, 1999, WIDENING GAP Haney P, 1998, J CLIN CHILD PSYCHOL, V27, P423, DOI 10.1207/s15374424jccp2704_6 Mullis AK, 1997, PSYCHOL REP, V81, P1363 Mayer Susan E., 1997, WHAT MONEY CANT BUY vandeMheen H, 1997, SOC SCI MED, V44, P13, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(96)00090-1 Jonsson Jan O., 1996, CAN ED BE EQUALIZED RONKA A, 1995, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V69, P381, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.69.2.381 ROSENBERG M, 1989, AM SOCIOL REV, V54, P1004, DOI 10.2307/2095720 NR 42 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD SEP PY 2011 VL 90 IS 1 BP 65 EP 83 PG 19 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 809EY UT WOS:000294035800004 ER PT J AU Reynolds, JR Johnson, MK AF Reynolds, John R. Johnson, Monica Kirkpatrick TI Change in the Stratification of Educational Expectations and Their Realization SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID MAINTAINED INEQUALITY; COLLEGE; ATTAINMENT; PLACE; TIME AB What do recent trends toward increasingly ambitious educational expectations and rising college completion rates mean for the stratification of higher education? This article shows that the odds of achieving expectations for a bachelor's degree increased across 15 cohorts of young adults, and to a lesser extent, for expectations to attend graduate/professional school. Gender-related constraints on realizing expectations for a bachelor's degree weakened, while constraints associated with minority racial/ethnic and lower socioeconomic statuses did not. Recent trends in educational stratification were thus a mixture of fulfilled expectations for growing proportions of some young adults, but continued social constraints for many others. Note, these results are derived from the experiences of high school seniors successfully reinterviewed over time, who are advantaged relative to school dropouts and nonrespondents. C1 [Reynolds, John R.] Florida State Univ, Dept Sociol, Tallahassee, FL 32306 USA. [Johnson, Monica Kirkpatrick] Washington State Univ, Pullman, WA 99164 USA. RP Reynolds, JR (reprint author), Florida State Univ, Dept Sociol, 113 Collegiate Loop, Tallahassee, FL 32306 USA EM john.reynolds@fsu.edu CR Bozick R, 2010, SOC FORCES, V88, P2027 Conger D, 2010, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V627, P184, DOI 10.1177/0002716209348751 Buchmann C, 2009, TEACH COLL REC, V111, P2320 Reynolds JR, 2008, SOC SCI RES, V37, P485, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2007.09.002 Goyette KA, 2008, SOC SCI RES, V37, P461, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2008.02.002 Messersmith EE, 2008, J SOC ISSUES, V64, P195, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-4560.2008.00555.x INGELS SJ, 2008, 2008320 NCES US DEP Johnston LD, 2007, NIH PUBLICATION von Hippel PT, 2007, SOCIOL METHODOL, V37, P83, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9531.2007.00180.x Shavit Y., 2007, STRATIFICATION HIGHE KewalRamani A., 2007, 2007039 NCES US DEP ROKSA J, 2007, STRATIFICATION HIGHE, P165 Roscigno VJ, 2006, SOC FORCES, V84, P2121, DOI 10.1353/sof.2006.0108 Reynolds JR, 2006, SOC PROBL, V53, P186, DOI 10.1525/sp.2006.53.2.186 Powell B, 2006, SOC FORCES, V84, P1359, DOI 10.1353/sof.2006.0064 Diprete TA, 2006, DEMOGRAPHY, V43, P1, DOI 10.1353/dem.2006.0003 Snyder T., 2006, 2006030 NCES US DEP KANE TJ, 2006, HDB EC ED, P1370 Morgan Stephen L., 2005, EDGE COMMITMENT ED A Manski CF, 2004, ECONOMETRICA, V72, P1329, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0262.2004.00537.x Royston Patrick, 2004, STATA J, V4, P227 Lucas SR, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P1642, DOI 10.1086/321300 Rosenbaum James, 2001, COLL ALL CAREER PATH BACHMAN JG, 2001, 54 I SOC RES Conley D., 1999, BEING BLACK LIVING R Schneider B., 1999, AMBITIOUS GENERATION Chavez L, 1998, COLOR BIND CALIFORNI Breen R, 1997, RATION SOC, V9, P275, DOI 10.1177/104346397009003002 Lucas SR, 1996, SOC FORCES, V75, P511, DOI 10.2307/2580411 Mortimer J. T., 1996, GENERATING SOCIAL ST, P17 Oliver M. L., 1995, BLACK WEALTH WHITE W ELDER GH, 1994, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V57, P4 RAFTERY AE, 1993, SOCIOL EDUC, V66, P41, DOI 10.2307/2112784 Raftery Adrian, 1993, PERSISTENT INEQUALIT, P25 NR 34 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD SEP PY 2011 VL 90 IS 1 BP 85 EP 109 PG 25 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 809EY UT WOS:000294035800005 ER PT J AU Treas, J van der Lippe, T Tai, TOC AF Treas, Judith van der Lippe, Tanja Tai, Tsui-o Chloe TI The Happy Homemaker? Married Women's Well-Being in Cross-National Perspective SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID CONTENTED FEMALE WORKER; LIFE SATISFACTION; MARITAL HAPPINESS; WIVES EMPLOYMENT; GENDER-DIFFERENCES; HOUSEHOLD LABOR; MULTIPLE ROLES; FAMILY; HOUSEWORK; WORKING AB A long-standing debate questions whether homemakers or working wives are happier. Drawing on cross-national data for 28 countries, this research uses multi-level models to provide fresh evidence on this controversy. All things considered, homemakers are slightly happier than wives who work fulltime, but they have no advantage over part-time workers. The work status gap in happiness persists even controlling for family life mediators. Cross-level interactions between work status and macro-level variables suggest that country characteristics-GDP, social spending, women's labor force participation, liberal gender ideology and public child care-ameliorate the disadvantage in happiness for full-time working wives compared to homemakers and part-time workers. C1 [Treas, Judith] Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Sociol, Irvine, CA 92697 USA. [van der Lippe, Tanja] Univ Utrecht, NL-3508 TC Utrecht, Netherlands. [Tai, Tsui-o Chloe] Univ Queensland, Brisbane, Qld 4072, Australia. RP Treas, J (reprint author), Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Sociol, Social Sci Plaza A,Room 3151, Irvine, CA 92697 USA EM jktreas@uci.edu CR Ray R, 2010, J EUR SOC POLICY, V20, P196, DOI 10.1177/0958928710364434 Graham C., 2010, INT DIFFERENCES WELL, P247 World Bank, 2010, WORLD DEV IND Veenhoven R, 2010, INT DIFFERENCES WELL, P328 TREAS J, 2010, DIVIDING DOMESTIC WO CHARLES M, 2010, DIVIDING DOMESTIC ME, P147 Treas Judith, 2010, Dividing the Domestic: Men, Women, and Housework in Cross-national Perspective, P125 HARTER JK, 2010, INT DIFFERENCES WELL, P398 *INT LAB ORG, 2010, SOC SEC EXP DAT Soons JPM, 2009, J MARRIAGE FAM, V71, P1141 Boye K, 2009, SOC INDIC RES, V93, P509, DOI 10.1007/s11205-008-9434-1 Stevenson B, 2009, AM ECON J-ECON POLIC, V1, P190, DOI 10.1257/pol.1.2.190 van Campen C, 2009, SOC SCI MED, V69, P56, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.04.014 Booth AL, 2009, ECONOMICA, V76, P176, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0335.2007.00670.x Andersen SH, 2009, WORK OCCUPATION, V36, P3, DOI 10.1177/0730888408327131 Mentzakis E., 2009, J SOCIOECONOMICS, V38, P147, DOI 10.1016/j.socec.2008.07.010 *INT LAB ORG, 2009, LABORSTA DAT LAB STA Morrison RL, 2009, SEX ROLES, V60, P1, DOI 10.1007/s11199-008-9513-4 BOUSHEY H, 2009, SHRIVER REPORT WOMEN Lee KS, 2008, SOC SCI RES, V37, P1216, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2008.02.005 Robinson JP, 2008, SOC INDIC RES, V89, P565, DOI 10.1007/s11205-008-9296-6 Ball R, 2008, SOC INDIC RES, V88, P497, DOI 10.1007/s11205-007-9217-0 Kuperberg A, 2008, GENDER SOC, V22, P497, DOI 10.1177/0891243208319767 Snoep L, 2008, J HAPPINESS STUD, V9, P207, DOI 10.1007/s10902-007-9045-6 Tesch-Romer C, 2008, SOC INDIC RES, V85, P329, DOI 10.1007/s11205-007-9133-3 Mueller CW, 2008, ADV GROUP PROCESS, V25, P117, DOI 10.1016/S0882-6145(08)25006-X Proulx CM, 2007, J MARRIAGE FAM, V69, P576, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2007.00393.x Fuwa M, 2007, SOC SCI RES, V36, P512, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2006.04.005 Stevens DP, 2007, J FAM ISSUES, V28, P242, DOI 10.1177/0192513X06294548 Daly M., 2007, 1 EUROPEAN QUALITY L Van der Lippe T., 2007, Competing Claims in Work and Family Life Behtoui A, 2007, EUR SOC, V9, P383, DOI 10.1080/14616690701314093 MICHON P, 2007, QUALITY PREFERENCES Zimmermann AC, 2006, POPUL DEV REV, V32, P511, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4457.2006.00135.x Kaufman G, 2006, J FAM ISSUES, V27, P735, DOI 10.1177/0192513X05285293 Schoen R, 2006, J FAM ISSUES, V27, P506, DOI 10.1177/0192513X05283983 Wilcox WB, 2006, SOC FORCES, V84, P1321, DOI 10.1353/sof.2006.0076 Greenhaus JH, 2006, ACAD MANAGE REV, V31, P72 Haller M, 2006, SOC INDIC RES, V75, P169, DOI 10.1007/s11205-004-6297-y Stutzer A., 2006, J SOCIOECONOMICS, V35, P326, DOI 10.1016/j.socec.2005.11.043 Diener E., 2006, APPL RES QUAL LIFE, V1, P151, DOI DOI 10.1007/S11482-006-9007-X Blau Francine D., 2006, EC WOMEN MEN WORK *INT MON FUND, 2006, GOV FIN STAT YB GUENDOUZI J, 2006, J MARRIAGE FAM, V68, P900 Crompton R, 2005, BRIT J SOCIOL, V56, P601, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-4446.2005.00085.x Nomaguchi KM, 2005, J FAM ISSUES, V26, P756, DOI 10.1177/0192513X05277524 Kohler HP, 2005, POPUL DEV REV, V31, P407, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4457.2005.00078.x Hill EJ, 2005, J FAM ISSUES, V26, P793, DOI 10.1177/0192513X05277542 van Daalen G, 2005, WOMEN HEALTH, V41, P43, DOI 10.1300/J013v41n02_04 Bohnke P, 2005, 1 EUROPEAN QUALITY L *INT MON FUND, 2005, GOV FIN STAT YB Fuwa M, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P751 Klumb PL, 2004, SOC SCI MED, V58, P1007, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(03)00262-4 Lucas RE, 2004, PSYCHOL SCI, V15, P8, DOI 10.1111/j.0963-7214.2004.01501002.x BUDIG MJ, 2004, BLACKWELL COMPANION, P416, DOI 10.1002/9780470999004.ch24 *INT MON FUND, 2004, GOV FIN STAT YB Belkin Lisa, 2003, NY TIMES MAGAZINE Christoph B., 2003, SOCIAL INDICATORS RE, V64, P521, DOI 10.1023/A:1025983431755 Batalova JA, 2002, J MARRIAGE FAM, V64, P743, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2002.00743.x Diener E, 2002, SOC INDIC RES, V57, P119, DOI 10.1023/A:1014411319119 Raudenbush S.W., 2002, HIERARCHICAL LINEAR NORDENMARK M, 2002, GENDER WORK ORGAN, V9, P125, DOI 10.1111/1468-0432.00152 Rogers SJ, 2001, J MARRIAGE FAM, V63, P458, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.00458.x Stevens D, 2001, J MARRIAGE FAM, V63, P514, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.00514.x Easterlin R. A., 2001, J HAPPINESS STUD, V2, P1, DOI 10.1023/A:1011504817292 Choi NG, 2001, INT J AGING HUM DEV, V52, P45, DOI 10.2190/2W25-DH9H-2F4D-7HWX Baxter J, 2000, SOCIOLOGY, V34, P609, DOI 10.1017/S0038038500000389 Treas J, 2000, SOC FORCES, V78, P1409, DOI 10.2307/3006179 Gershuny J, 2000, CHANGING TIMES WORK Allen T D, 2000, J Occup Health Psychol, V5, P278, DOI 10.1037/1076-8998.5.2.278 EHRHARDT JJ, 2000, J HAPPINESS STUDIES, V1, P47 Oishi S, 1999, PERS SOC PSYCHOL B, V25, P980, DOI 10.1177/01461672992511006 Argyle M., 1999, WELL BEING FDN HEDON, P353 Winkelmann L, 1998, ECONOMICA, V65, P1, DOI 10.1111/1468-0335.00111 ROBINSON JP, 1998, 3 MARRIAGE FAMILY, V60, P205 Lundberg SJ, 1997, J HUM RESOUR, V32, P463, DOI 10.2307/146179 Lucas RE, 1996, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V71, P616, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.71.3.616 Marks SR, 1996, J MARRIAGE FAM, V58, P417, DOI 10.2307/353506 Sanchez L, 1996, J FAM ISSUES, V17, P358, DOI 10.1177/019251396017003004 Hays S., 1996, CULTURAL CONTRADICTI GIELE JZ, 1996, PROMISES KEEP DECLIN, P89 PHELAN J, 1994, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V57, P95, DOI 10.2307/2786704 TREAS J, 1993, AM SOCIOL REV, V58, P723, DOI 10.2307/2096283 MILLER ML, 1991, GENDER SOC, V5, P565, DOI 10.1177/089124391005004008 SUITOR JJ, 1991, J MARRIAGE FAM, V53, P221, DOI 10.2307/353146 DeVault M. L., 1991, FEEDING FAMILY SOCIA England P., 1986, HOUSEHOLDS EMPLOYMEN BENIN MH, 1985, J MARRIAGE FAM, V47, P975, DOI 10.2307/352341 KESSLER RC, 1982, AM SOCIOL REV, V47, P216, DOI 10.2307/2094964 Campbell A., 1981, SENSE WELL BEING AM WRIGHT JD, 1978, J MARRIAGE FAM, V40, P301, DOI 10.2307/350761 BURKE RJ, 1976, J MARRIAGE FAM, V38, P279, DOI 10.2307/350387 FERREE MM, 1976, SOC PROBL, V23, P431, DOI 10.1525/sp.1976.23.4.03a00060 SIEBER SD, 1974, AM SOCIOL REV, V39, P567, DOI 10.2307/2094422 EASTERLI.RA, 1973, PUBLIC INTEREST, P3 Brickman P., 1971, ADAPTATION LEVEL THE, P287 OPPENHEIMER VK, 1970, FEMALE LABOR FORCE U Friedan B., 1963, FEMININE MYSTIQUE Parsons T., 1956, FAMILY SOCIALIZATION FESTINGER, 1954, HUM RELAT, V7, P117 NR 100 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD SEP PY 2011 VL 90 IS 1 BP 111 EP 132 PG 22 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 809EY UT WOS:000294035800006 ER PT J AU Massoglia, M Remster, B King, RD AF Massoglia, Michael Remster, Brianna King, Ryan D. TI Stigma or Separation? Understanding the Incarceration-Divorce Relationship SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID MARITAL INSTABILITY; LIFE-COURSE; FAMILY; INEQUALITY; EMPLOYMENT; HEALTH; IMPACT; STABILITY; INMATES; PRISON AB Prior research suggests a correlation between incarceration and marital dissolution, although questions remain as to why this association exists. Is it the stigma associated with "doing time" that drives couples apart? Or is it simply the duration of physical separation that leads to divorce? This research utilizes data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY79) and the Survey of Officer and Enlisted Personnel to shed light on these questions. The findings generally support a separation explanation of the incarceration-divorce relationship. Specifically, the data show that exposure to incarceration has no effect on marital dissolution after duration of incarceration is taken into account. In addition, across both datasets we find that individuals who spend substantial time away from spouses are at higher risk of divorce. The findings point to the importance of spousal separation for understanding the incarceration-marital dissolution relationship. Moreover, and in contrast to settings in which stigma appears quite salient (e.g., labor markets), our results suggest that the shared history and degree of intimacy among married partners may weaken the salience of the stigma of incarceration. Findings are discussed in the context of a burgeoning body of work on the collateral consequences of incarceration and have implications for the growing pool of men in American society returning from prison. C1 [Massoglia, Michael] Penn State Univ, Dept Sociol, University Pk, PA 16802 USA. [Remster, Brianna] Penn State Univ, University Pk, PA 16802 USA. [King, Ryan D.] SUNY Albany, Albany, NY 12222 USA. RP Massoglia, M (reprint author), Penn State Univ, Dept Sociol, 211 Oswald Tower,Univ Pk, University Pk, PA 16802 USA EM mam74@psu.edu CR Apel R, 2010, J QUANT CRIMINOL, V26, P269, DOI 10.1007/s10940-009-9087-5 Harris A, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P1753 Wakefield S, 2010, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V36, P387, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.012809.102551 *USA, 2010, HLTH PROM RISK RED S Goffman A, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P339 Pager D, 2009, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V623, P195, DOI 10.1177/0002716208330793 Western B, 2009, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V621, P221, DOI 10.1177/0002716208324850 WEST HC, 2009, PRISONERS 2008 Massoglia M, 2008, LAW SOC REV, V42, P275, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-5893.2008.00342.x Massoglia M, 2008, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V49, P56 Comfort Megan, 2008, DOING TIME TOGETHER Schnittker J, 2007, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V48, P115 Binswanger IA, 2007, NEW ENGL J MED, V356, P157, DOI 10.1056/NEJMsa064115 Comfort M, 2007, ANNU REV LAW SOC SCI, V3, P271, DOI 10.1146/annurev.lawsocsci.3.081806.112829 Burrell LM, 2006, ARMED FORCES SOC, V33, P43, DOI 10.1177/0002764206288804 Uggen C, 2006, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V605, P281, DOI 10.1177/0002716206286898 Western Bruce, 2006, PUNISHMENT INEQUALIT Lopoo LM, 2005, J MARRIAGE FAM, V67, P721, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2005.00165.x Major B, 2005, ANNU REV PSYCHOL, V56, P393, DOI 10.1146/annurev.psych.56.091103.070137 TRAVIS J, 2005, THEY ALL COME BACK Pettit B, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P151 Braman Donald, 2004, DOING TIME OUTSIDE I Harper CC, 2004, J RES ADOLESCENCE, V14, P369, DOI 10.1111/j.1532-7795.2004.00079.x Nelson Timothy J., 2004, IMPRISONING AM SOCIA, P46 Pager D, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V108, P937, DOI 10.1086/374403 Hairston C. F., 2003, PRISONERS ONCE REMOV, P259 HANEY C, 2003, PRISONERS ONCE REMOV, P33 Western B, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P526, DOI 10.2307/3088944 Nurse Anne, 2002, FATHERHOOD ARRESTED Link BG, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P363, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.27.1.363 Mumola C. J., 2000, INCARCERATED PARENTS Edin K., 2000, AM PROSPECT, V11, P26 Dinovitzer Ronit, 1999, CRIME JUSTICE, V26, P121, DOI 10.1086/449296 MaCurdy T, 1998, J HUM RESOUR, V33, P345, DOI 10.2307/146435 GIRSHICK LB, 1996, SOLEDAD WOMEN CARLSON BE, 1991, CRIM JUSTICE BEHAV, V18, P318, DOI 10.1177/0093854891018003005 DAWSON DA, 1991, J MARRIAGE FAM, V53, P573, DOI 10.2307/352734 BELSKY J, 1991, J MARRIAGE FAM, V53, P487, DOI 10.2307/352914 PAVALKO EK, 1990, AM J SOCIOL, V95, P1213, DOI 10.1086/229427 STACK S, 1990, J MARRIAGE FAM, V52, P119, DOI 10.2307/352844 RINDFUSS RR, 1990, J MARRIAGE FAM, V52, P259, DOI 10.2307/352856 FISHMAN LT, 1990, WOMEN WALL Modell John, 1989, ONES OWN YOUTH ADULT HILL MS, 1988, J FAM ISSUES, V9, P427, DOI 10.1177/019251388009004001 SPITZE G, 1985, J FAM ISSUES, V6, P307, DOI 10.1177/019251385006003004 MORGAN SP, 1985, AM J SOCIOL, V90, P1055, DOI 10.1086/228176 BOOTH A, 1985, J MARRIAGE FAM, V47, P67, DOI 10.2307/352069 BOOTH A, 1984, AM J SOCIOL, V90, P567, DOI 10.1086/228117 Allison P, 1984, EVENT HIST ANAL Morris Pauline, 1965, PRISONERS THEIR FAMI Goffman E., 1963, STIGMA NOTES MANAGEM NR 51 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD SEP PY 2011 VL 90 IS 1 BP 133 EP 155 PG 23 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 809EY UT WOS:000294035800007 ER PT J AU Hill, JP Vaidyanathan, B AF Hill, Jonathan P. Vaidyanathan, Brandon TI Substitution or Symbiosis? Assessing the Relationship between Religious and Secular Giving SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID DONATIONS; CULTURE AB Research on philanthropy has not sufficiently examined whether charitable giving to religious causes impinges on giving to secular causes. Examining three waves of national panel data, we find that the relationship between religious and secular giving is generally not of a zero-sum nature; families that increase their religious giving also increase their secular giving. We argue that this finding is best accounted for by a practice theory of social action which emphasizes how religious congregations foster skills and practices related to charitable giving. We also argue that denominational variation in the influence of religious giving is best accounted for by the financial structuring of the denomination. We conclude with the implications for studies of religious causal influence more generally. C1 [Hill, Jonathan P.] Calvin Coll, Dept Sociol & Social Work, Grand Rapids, MI 49546 USA. [Vaidyanathan, Brandon] Univ Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA. RP Hill, JP (reprint author), Calvin Coll, Dept Sociol & Social Work, 3201 Burton SE, Grand Rapids, MI 49546 USA EM jph27@calvin.edu CR Lizardo O, 2010, POETICS, V38, P204, DOI 10.1016/j.poetic.2009.11.003 Chaves M, 2010, J SCI STUD RELIG, V49, P1 Smilde David, 2010, EMERGING STRONG PROG WILHELM MO, 2010, J SCI STUD RELIG, V49, P389 Guo C, 2009, ADMIN SOC, V41, P600, DOI 10.1177/0095399709341038 Gross N, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P358 *GIV US, 2009, ANN REP GIV US Vaisey S, 2008, SOCIOL FORUM, V23, P603, DOI 10.1111/j.1573-7861.2008.00079.x Chaves Mark, 2008, NATL CONGREGATIONS S Smith C., 2008, PASSING PLATE WHY AM PETTY M, 2008, HINCKLEY J POLITICS, V9, P51 MOURAO PR, 2008, J EC SOCIAL RES, V10, P1 WILHELM MO, 2008, 2005 CTR PHILA UNPUB James RN, 2007, AM J ECON SOCIOL, V66, P697, DOI 10.1111/j.1536-7150.2007.00536.x Harbaugh WT, 2007, SCIENCE, V316, P1622, DOI 10.1126/science.1140738 Wilhelm MO, 2007, J SCI STUD RELIG, V46, P217, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-5906.2007.00352.x Bekkers R., 2007, GENEROSITY PHILANTHR MOURAO PR, 2007, INT J SOC ECON, V34, P961, DOI 10.1108/03068290710830670 Brooks A. C., 2006, WHO REALLY CARES SUR Regnerus MD, 2005, REV RELIG RES, V47, P23, DOI 10.2307/4148279 Allison PaulD, 2005, FIXED EFFECTS REGRES WILHELM MO, 2005, CTR PHILANTHROPY PAN Chaves Mark, 2004, CONGREGATIONS AM Halaby CN, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P507, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.30.012703.110629 BROWN MS, 2004, RECONCILING ESTIMATE Andreoni J, 2003, J HUM RESOUR, V38, P111, DOI 10.2307/1558758 Brooks A. C, 2003, POLICY REV, V121, P39 Swidler A, 2001, TALK LOVE CULTURE MA *IND SECT, 2001, GIV VOL US Stark R, 2000, ACTS FAITH EXPLAININ Williamson O.E., 2000, J ECON LIT, V38, P595, DOI 10.1257/jel.38.3.595 Dahl GB, 1999, AM ECON REV, V89, P703, DOI 10.1257/aer.89.4.703 Duncan B, 1999, J PUBLIC ECON, V72, P213, DOI 10.1016/S0047-2727(98)00097-8 Chaves Mark, 1999, FINANCING AM RELIG, P169 DiMaggio P, 1997, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V23, P263, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.263 Hechter M, 1997, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V23, P191, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.191 MILLER AS, 1995, J SCI STUD RELIG, V34, P63, DOI 10.2307/1386523 IANNACCONE LR, 1995, J SCI STUD RELIG, V34, P76, DOI 10.2307/1386524 WANN DL, 1994, PSYCHOL REP, V74, P1027 IANNACCONE LR, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V99, P1180, DOI 10.1086/230409 BECKER GS, 1993, J POLIT ECON, V101, P385, DOI 10.1086/261880 Hardy M, 1993, REGRESSION DUMMY VAR Anand P., 1993, FDN RATIONAL CHOICE HONORE BE, 1992, ECONOMETRICA, V60, P533, DOI 10.2307/2951583 Wuthnow R., 1991, ACTS COMPASSION CARI ELLISON CG, 1991, THESIS DUKE U ANDREONI J, 1990, ECON J, V100, P464, DOI 10.2307/2234133 Bourdieu P., 1990, LOGIC PRACTICE HODGKINSON V, 1990, FAITH PHILANTHROPY A, P284 Bandura A, 1977, SOCIAL LEARNING THEO Kelley Dean M., 1977, WHY CONSERVATIVE CHU Neyman J, 1948, ECONOMETRICA, V16, P1, DOI 10.2307/1914288 Coase RH, 1937, ECONOMICA-NEW SER, V4, P386, DOI 10.2307/2626876 ALTMAN M, FDN CONT BEHAV EC FD NR 54 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD SEP PY 2011 VL 90 IS 1 BP 157 EP 180 PG 24 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 809EY UT WOS:000294035800008 ER PT J AU Mayrl, D Uecker, JE AF Mayrl, Damon Uecker, Jeremy E. TI Higher Education and Religious Liberalization among Young Adults SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID COLLEGE; BELIEFS; PARTICIPATION; ADOLESCENCE; INVOLVEMENT; PREDICTORS; ATTENDANCE AB Going to college has long been assumed to liberalize students' religious beliefs. Using longitudinal data from the National Study of Youth and Religion, we compare change in the content of religious beliefs of those who do and do not attend college. We find that, in general, college students are no more likely to develop liberal religious beliefs than non-students. In some cases, collegians actually appear more likely to retain their initial beliefs. Change in religious beliefs appears instead to be more strongly associated with network effects. These findings indicate that college's effect on students' religious beliefs is both weak and fragmented, and suggest that the multiplicity of social worlds on college campuses may help to sustain religious beliefs as well as religious practice and commitment. C1 [Mayrl, Damon] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Sociol, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA. [Uecker, Jeremy E.] Univ N Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA. RP Mayrl, D (reprint author), Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Sociol, 410 Barrows Hall 1980, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA EM mayrl@berkeley.edu CR Astin A. W., 2011, CULTIVATING SPIRIT C Reimer S, 2010, SOCIOL RELIG, V71, P393, DOI 10.1093/socrel/srq049 Barry CM, 2010, INT J BEHAV DEV, V34, P311, DOI 10.1177/0165025409350964 Vaisey S, 2010, SOC FORCES, V88, P1595 Merino SM, 2010, J SCI STUD RELIG, V49, P231 Schieman S, 2010, SOCIOL RELIG, V71, P25, DOI 10.1093/socrel/srq004 Hill JP, 2009, J SCI STUD RELIG, V48, P515 Mayrl D, 2009, J SCI STUD RELIG, V48, P260 Smith C., 2009, SOULS TRANSITION REL Ecklund EH, 2008, SOC FORCES, V86, P1805 Good M, 2008, CHILD DEV PERSPECT, V2, P32, DOI 10.1111/j.1750-8606.2008.00038.x Bryant AN, 2008, J HIGH EDUC, V79, P1, DOI 10.1353/jhe.2008.0000 Sherkat DE, 2008, SOCIOL SPECTRUM, V28, P438, DOI 10.1080/02732170802205932 Stevens ML, 2008, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V34, P127, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.34.040507.134737 Uecker JE, 2007, SOC FORCES, V85, P1667, DOI 10.1353/sof.2007.0083 Clydesdale Timothy, 2007, 1 YEAR OUT UNDERSTAN Hurtado S., 2007, FINDINGS 2005 ADM YO Wuthnow R, 2007, BABY BOOMERS 20 30 S SCHMALZBAUER J, 2007, CAMPUS MINISTRY NUMB CALHOUN C, 2007, RELIG ENGAGEMENTS AM Schwadel P, 2005, REV RELIG RES, V47, P150, DOI 10.2307/3512047 Pascarella E. T., 2005, COLL AFFECTS STUDENT, V2 Arnett J. J., 2004, EMERGING ADULTHOOD W HARTLEY HV, 2004, COLL STUDENT AFFAIRS, V23, P111 LEE JJ, 2004, UNDERSTANDING STUDEN Smith C, 2003, J SCI STUD RELIG, V42, P17, DOI 10.1111/1468-5906.t01-1-00158 Cole D, 2003, J COLL STUDENT DEV, V44, P47, DOI 10.1353/csd.2003.0002 Gunnoe ML, 2002, J SCI STUD RELIG, V41, P613, DOI 10.1111/1468-5906.00141 Wilcox WB, 2002, J MARRIAGE FAM, V64, P780, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2002.00780.x Lee JJ, 2002, REV HIGH EDUC, V25, P369, DOI 10.1353/rhe.2002.0020 Lee JJ, 2002, J COLL STUDENT DEV, V43, P341 LAKOFF G, 2002, MORAL POLITICS CONSE NASH RJ, 2001, RELIG PLURALISM ACAD Cherry Conrad, 2001, RELIG CAMPUS WHAT RE Roberts AE, 2001, SOCIOL SPECTRUM, V21, P81, DOI 10.1080/02732170121239 Sherkat DE, 1998, SOC FORCES, V76, P1087, DOI 10.2307/3005704 Smith Christian, 1998, AM EVANGELICALISM EM Johnson DC, 1997, J SCI STUD RELIG, V36, P231, DOI 10.2307/1387555 Myers SM, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P858, DOI 10.2307/2096457 PANCER SM, 1995, J PERS, V63, P213, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-6494.1995.tb00808.x PETERSEN LR, 1994, J SCI STUD RELIG, V33, P122, DOI 10.2307/1386599 HOGE DR, 1993, J SCI STUD RELIG, V32, P242 Pascarella E. T., 1991, COLL AFFECTS STUDENT WILLITS FK, 1989, REV RELIG RES, V31, P68, DOI 10.2307/3511025 Wuthnow R, 1988, RESTRUCTURING AM REL Fowler J, 1981, STAGES FAITH PSYCHOL BECKER LB, 1977, SOCIOL ANAL, V38, P65, DOI 10.2307/3709838 Feldman K.A., 1969, IMPACT COLL STUDENTS Barth Karl, 1968, EPISTLE ROMANS Berger P, 1967, SACRED CANOPY ELEMEN NR 50 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD SEP PY 2011 VL 90 IS 1 BP 181 EP 208 PG 28 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 809EY UT WOS:000294035800009 ER PT J AU Shafer, EF Malhotra, N AF Shafer, Emily Fitzgibbons Malhotra, Neil TI The Effect of a Child's Sex on Support for Traditional Gender Roles SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID ROLE ATTITUDES; COLLEGE-WOMEN; SOCIAL-STATUS; DAUGHTERS; SONS; FEMINISM; SOCIALIZATION; MEN; INVESTMENT; HYPOTHESIS AB We examine whether sex of child affects parents' beliefs about traditional gender roles. Using an improved methodological approach that explicitly analyzes the natural experiment via differences in differences, we find that having a daughter (vs. having a son) causes men to reduce their support for traditional gender roles, but a female child has no such effect among women, representing less than 4 percent of the size of the standard deviation of the attitude scale. C1 [Malhotra, Neil] Stanford Univ, Stanford, CA 94305 USA. [Shafer, Emily Fitzgibbons] Harvard Univ, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA. RP Malhotra, N (reprint author), Stanford Univ, 655 Knight Way, Stanford, CA 94305 USA EM neilm@stanford.edu CR DAHL MS, 2011, DAUGHTER FATHER WOME Oswald AJ, 2010, REV ECON STAT, V92, P213, DOI 10.1162/rest.2010.11436 Hekman DR, 2010, ACAD MANAGE J, V53, P238 CONLEY D, 2010, EFFECT DAUGHTERS PAR Urbatsch R, 2009, INT STUD QUART, V53, P1, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-2478.2008.01521.x Angrist JD, 2009, MOSTLY HARMLESS ECONOMETRICS: AN EMPIRICISTS COMPANION, P1 Dahl GB, 2008, REV ECON STUD, V75, P1085, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-937X.2008.00514.x Washington EL, 2008, AM ECON REV, V98, P311, DOI 10.1257/aer.98.1.311 Corrigall EA, 2007, SEX ROLES, V56, P847, DOI 10.1007/s11199-007-9242-0 Lundberg S, 2007, DEMOGRAPHY, V44, P79, DOI 10.1353/dem.2007.0007 Raley S, 2006, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V32, P401, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.32.061604.123106 COTTER DA, 2006, ANN M AM SOC ASS MON Hopcroft RL, 2005, SOC FORCES, V83, P1111, DOI 10.1353/sof.2005.0035 Bolzendahl CI, 2004, SOC FORCES, V83, P759, DOI 10.1353/sof.2005.0005 Ridgeway CL, 2004, GENDER SOC, V18, P510, DOI 10.1177/0891243204265269 Catalano RA, 2003, HUM REPROD, V18, P1972, DOI 10.1093/humrep/deg370 Tucker CJ, 2003, FAM RELAT, V52, P82, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3729.2003.00082.x Lundberg S, 2002, REV ECON STAT, V84, P251, DOI 10.1162/003465302317411514 Myers SM, 2002, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V65, P18, DOI 10.2307/3090166 Ellis L, 2002, SOC BIOL, V49, P35 Townsend N. W., 2002, PACKAGE DEAL MARRIAG Marleau JD, 2000, PERCEPT MOTOR SKILL, V91, P697 Huddy L, 2000, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V64, P309, DOI 10.1086/317991 Warner RL, 1999, GENDER SOC, V13, P503, DOI 10.1177/089124399013004005 Freese J, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V104, P1704, DOI 10.1086/210221 Kamo Y, 1997, J COMP FAM STUD, V28, P204 Bianchi SM, 1997, J MARRIAGE FAM, V59, P332, DOI 10.2307/353474 Ridgeway CL, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P218, DOI 10.2307/2657301 Buschman JK, 1996, POLIT PSYCHOL, V17, P59, DOI 10.2307/3791943 Coltrane S., 1996, FAMILY MAN FATHERHOO AMATO PR, 1995, AM SOCIOL REV, V60, P58, DOI 10.2307/2096345 DOWNEY DB, 1994, SOCIOL QUART, V35, P33, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1994.tb00397.x Gerson Kathleen, 1993, NO MANS LAND MENS CH WARNER RL, 1991, J MARRIAGE FAM, V53, P1051, DOI 10.2307/353008 LYTTON H, 1991, PSYCHOL BULL, V109, P267, DOI 10.1037//0033-2909.109.2.267 FRANKLIN CH, 1991, POLITICAL METHODOLOG, V4, P13 PLUTZER E, 1988, AM SOCIOL REV, V53, P640, DOI 10.2307/2095855 Morgan P. S., 1988, AM J SOCIOL, V94, P110 RENZETTI CM, 1987, SEX ROLES, V16, P265, DOI 10.1007/BF00289954 Lamb M. E., 1987, FATHERS ROLE CROSS C Trivers RL, 1985, SOCIAL EVOLUTION FINLAY B, 1985, SEX ROLES, V12, P637, DOI 10.1007/BF00288183 KOMAROVSKY M, 1985, WOMEN COLL SHAPING N KLEIN E, 1984, GENDER POLITICS CONS THORNTON A, 1983, AM SOCIOL REV, V48, P211, DOI 10.2307/2095106 LOPATA HZ, 1978, SIGNS, V3, P718, DOI 10.1086/493523 NR 46 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD SEP PY 2011 VL 90 IS 1 BP 209 EP 222 PG 14 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 809EY UT WOS:000294035800010 ER PT J AU Sassler, S Joyner, K AF Sassler, Sharon Joyner, Kara TI Social Exchange and the Progression of Sexual Relationships in Emerging Adulthood SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID UNITED-STATES; COHABITING COUPLES; UNION TRANSITIONS; MARRIED-COUPLES; MATE SELECTION; MARITAL-STATUS; INTERMARRIAGE; COHABITATION; GENDER; EXPECTATIONS AB Research has extensively examined matching on race and other characteristics in cohabitation and marriage, but it has generally disregarded sexual and romantic relationships. Using data from the 2002 National Survey of Family Growth and the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, we examine the tempo of key transitions in the recent relationships of young adults ages 18-24. We focus on how the racial mix of partners in relationships is associated with the timing of sex, cohabitation and marriage. We find evidence that relationships between white men and minority women proceed more rapidly from romance to sexual involvement and from sexual involvement to cohabitation compared to relationships involving other racial combinations. Our findings have important implications for social exchange perspectives on mate selection. C1 [Sassler, Sharon] Cornell Univ, Dept Policy Anal & Management, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA. [Joyner, Kara] Bowling Green State Univ, Bowling Green, OH 43403 USA. RP Sassler, S (reprint author), Cornell Univ, Dept Policy Anal & Management, 297 Martha Van Rensselaer Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA EM Sharon.Sassler@Cornell.edu CR Sassler S, 2011, J FAM ISSUES, V32, P482, DOI 10.1177/0192513X10391045 Addo FR, 2010, FAM RELAT, V59, P408, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3729.2010.00612.x Kalmijn M, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P1252 HOHMANNMARRIOTT, 2008, SOC FORCES, V87, P825 Manning WD, 2007, J MARRIAGE FAM, V69, P559, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2007.00392.x O'Sullivan LF, 2007, PERSPECT SEX REPRO H, V39, P100, DOI 10.1363/391007 Qian ZC, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P68 CAVANAGH S, 2007, SOCIOL INQ, V77, P552 Rhoades GK, 2006, J FAM PSYCHOL, V20, P553, DOI 10.1037/0893-3200.20.4.553 Stanley SM, 2006, FAM RELAT, V55, P499, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3729.2006.00418.x Blau FD, 2006, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V60, P45 Finer LB, 2006, PERSPECT SEX REPRO H, V38, P90, DOI 10.1111/j.1931-2393.2006.tb00065.x Lepkowski JM, 2006, VITAL HLTH STAT, V142, P1 ENGLAND P, 2006, FAMILIES TRANSITION, P151 GOLDSTEIN JR, 2006, SOC FORCES, V85, P122 Schwartz CR, 2005, DEMOGRAPHY, V42, P621, DOI 10.1353/dem.2005.0036 Joyner K, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P563 Rosenfeld MJ, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P541 Rosenfeld MJ, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P1284, DOI 10.1086/428441 Allison PaulD, 2005, FIXED EFFECTS REGRES Edmonston Barry, 2005, POPULATION B POPULAT VAQUERA E, 2005, SOCIAL SCI Q, V86, P485 Heuveline P, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P1214, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00088.x Blackwell DL, 2004, SOCIOL QUART, V45, P719, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.2004.tb02311.x Bearman PS, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P44, DOI 10.1086/386272 Sassler S, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P491, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2004.00033.x Sassler S, 2004, J FAM ISSUES, V25, P139, DOI 10.1177/0192513X03257708 Ciabattari T, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P118, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00009.x Baumeister RF, 2004, PERS SOC PSYCHOL REV, V8, P339, DOI 10.1207/s15327957pspr0804_2 LICHTER DT, 2004, AM PEOPLE CENSUS 200 HARRIS D, 2004, SOC SCI RES, V34, P236 BONILLASILVA, 2004, SYSTEM, V27, P931 Sassler S, 2003, SOC SCI RES, V32, P553, DOI 10.1016/S0049-089X(03)00016-4 Heimdal KR, 2003, J MARRIAGE FAM, V65, P525, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2003.00525.x Harris K., 2003, NATL LONGITUDINAL ST Jacobs JA, 2002, SOCIOL FORUM, V17, P621, DOI 10.1023/A:1021029507937 Thornton A, 2001, J MARRIAGE FAM, V63, P1009, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.01009.x Fu VK, 2001, DEMOGRAPHY, V38, P147, DOI 10.2307/3088297 Brown SL, 2000, J MARRIAGE FAM, V62, P833, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2000.00833.x Laner MR, 2000, J FAM ISSUES, V21, P488, DOI 10.1177/019251300021004004 Gupta S, 1999, J MARRIAGE FAM, V61, P700, DOI 10.2307/353571 Fu HS, 1999, FAM PLANN PERSPECT, V31, P56, DOI 10.2307/2991640 Yancey G, 1998, J FAM ISSUES, V19, P334, DOI 10.1177/019251398019003006 Sprecher S, 1998, J SEX RES, V35, P32 Sprecher S, 1997, SEX ROLES, V37, P361, DOI 10.1023/A:1025601423031 Qian ZC, 1997, DEMOGRAPHY, V34, P263, DOI 10.2307/2061704 Surra CA, 1997, J MARRIAGE FAM, V59, P5, DOI 10.2307/353658 Steeh Charlotte, 1997, RACIAL ATTITUDES AM GAINES SO, 1997, HDB PERSONAL RELATIO, P197 Cohen LL, 1996, J SEX RES, V33, P291 Clarkberg M, 1995, SOC FORCES, V74, P609, DOI 10.2307/2580494 Waite LJ, 1995, DEMOGRAPHY, V32, P483, DOI 10.2307/2061670 Allison P.D, 1995, SURVIVAL ANAL USING Laumann EO, 1994, SOCIAL ORG SEXUALITY SHELTON BA, 1993, J FAM ISSUES, V14, P401, DOI 10.1177/019251393014003004 SCHOEN R, 1993, J MARRIAGE FAM, V55, P408, DOI 10.2307/352811 Rose S, 1989, GENDER SOC, V3, P258, DOI 10.1177/089124389003002006 MURSTEIN BI, 1989, J SOC PSYCHOL, V129, P325 SCHOEN R, 1989, J MARRIAGE FAM, V51, P465, DOI 10.2307/352508 England P., 1986, HOUSEHOLDS EMPLOYMEN Becker Gary S., 1981, TREATISE FAMILY UDRY JR, 1977, AM J SOCIOL, V83, P154, DOI 10.1086/226511 PEPIAU LA, 1977, J SOC ISSUES, V33, P86 TAYLOR PA, 1976, AM SOCIOL REV, V41, P484, DOI 10.2307/2094255 ELDER GH, 1969, AM SOCIOL REV, V34, P519, DOI 10.2307/2091961 COLEMAN JS, 1966, AM J SOCIOL, V72, P217, DOI 10.1086/224281 KERCKHOFF AC, 1962, AM SOCIOL REV, V27, P295, DOI 10.2307/2089791 BLUMER H, 1958, PAC SOCIOL REV, V1, P3 Merton RK, 1941, PSYCHIATR, V4, P361 Davis K, 1941, AM ANTHROPOL, V43, P376, DOI 10.1525/aa.1941.43.3.02a00030 NR 70 TC 0 Z9 0 PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC PI CARY PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD SEP PY 2011 VL 90 IS 1 BP 223 EP 245 PG 23 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 809EY UT WOS:000294035800011 ER PT J AU Trent, K South, SJ AF Trent, Katherine South, Scott J. TI Too Many Men? Sex Ratios and Women's Partnering Behavior in China SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID CROSS-NATIONAL ANALYSIS; MARRIAGE MARKETS; UNITED-STATES; NONMARITAL FERTILITY; MATE PREFERENCES; MISSING FEMALES; TEEN PREGNANCY; 1ST MARRIAGE; 2000 CENSUS; YOUNG AB The relative numbers of women and men are changing dramatically in China, but the consequences of these imbalanced sex ratios have received little empirical attention. We merge data from the Chinese Health and Family Life Survey with community-level data from Chinese censuses to examine the relationship between cohort- and community-specific sex ratios and women's partnering behavior. Consistent with demographic-opportunity theory and sociocultural theory, we find that high sex ratios (indicating more men relative to women) are associated with an increased likelihood that women marry before age 25. However, high sex ratios are also associated with an increased likelihood that women engage in premarital and extramarital sexual relationships and have more than one sexual partner, findings consistent with demographic-opportunity theory but inconsistent with sociocultural theory. C1 [Trent, Katherine; South, Scott J.] SUNY Albany, Dept Sociol, Albany, NY 12222 USA. RP Trent, K (reprint author), SUNY Albany, Dept Sociol, Albany, NY 12222 USA EM k.trent@albany.edu CR *CHIN POP INF RES, 2008, 1 SAMPL 1990 CHIN PO Parish WL, 2007, POPUL DEV REV, V33, P729 Stone EA, 2007, EUR J SOC PSYCHOL, V37, P288, DOI 10.1002/ejsp.357 Gu BC, 2007, POPUL DEV REV, V33, P129 2006, CHINESE HLTH FAMILY PORTER M, 2006, IMBALANCE CHINAS MAR Oster E, 2005, J POLIT ECON, V113, P1163, DOI 10.1086/498588 Davin D, 2005, INDIAN J GEND STUD, V12, P173, DOI 10.1177/097152150501200202 Tucker JD, 2005, AIDS, V19, P539, DOI 10.1097/01.aids.0000163929.84154.87 Schmitt DP, 2005, BEHAV BRAIN SCI, V28, P247, DOI 10.1017/S0140525X05000051 Poston Dudley L., 2005, Genus, V61, P119 Sheng X., 2005, HDB WORLD FAMILIES, P99 POSTON DL, 2005, CHINA BACHELOR BOMB ALLISON PD, 2005, FIXED EFFECT REGRESS *NAT RES COUNC PAN, 2005, GROW GLOB CHANG TRAN YUAN X, 2005, INT C FEM DEF AS TRE Parish WL, 2004, INT FAM PLAN PERSPEC, V30, P174, DOI 10.1363/3017404 Goodkind DM, 2004, POP STUD-J DEMOG, V58, P281, DOI 10.1080/003247204000272348 Barber N, 2004, J CROSS CULT PSYCHOL, V35, P648, DOI 10.1177/0022022104270108 Hudson V., 2004, BARE BRANCHES SECURI Banister J., 2004, Journal of Population Research, V21, P19 Yuan X., 2004, J POPULATION STUDIES, V29, P147 China Data Center, 2004, COMPL COLL 2000 CHIN TAN L, 2004, MOVE WOMEN RURAL TO, P151 ANDERSON BA, 2004, 04565 PSC U MICH He CF, 2003, INT MIGR REV, V37, P1220 Murphy R, 2003, POPUL DEV REV, V29, P595, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4457.2003.00595.x Browning CR, 2003, J MARRIAGE FAM, V65, P730, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2003.00730.x Parish WL, 2003, JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC, V289, P1265, DOI 10.1001/jama.289.10.1265 Buss D., 2003, EVOLUTION DESIRE STR Cai Y., 2003, CHINA REV, V3, P13 BARBER N, 2003, J DIVORCE REMARRIAGE, V39, P113, DOI 10.1300/J087v39n03_06 Angrist J, 2002, Q J ECON, V117, P997, DOI 10.1162/003355302760193940 Hudson VM, 2002, INT SECURITY, V26, P5, DOI 10.1162/016228802753696753 Secondi GS, 2002, J COMP FAM STUD, V33, P215 Pinker Steven, 2002, BLANK SLATE MODERN D Lavely WM, 2001, POPUL DEV REV, V27, P755, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4457.2001.00755.x Barber N, 2001, J CROSS CULT PSYCHOL, V32, P259, DOI 10.1177/0022022101032003001 Sen A, 2001, DEV FREEDOM Junhong C., 2001, POPUL DEV REV, V27, P259, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4457.2001.00259.x Barber N, 2000, CROSS-CULT RES, V34, P26 Bian YJ, 2000, STUD CHINA, V25, P111 MICKELSON E, 2000, REDRAWING BOUNDARIES, P134 Whyte MK, 2000, STUD CHINA, V25, P157 Peng XH, 1999, J BIOSOC SCI, V31, P487, DOI 10.1017/S0021932099004873 Das Gupta M, 1999, DEV CHANGE, V30, P619, DOI 10.1111/1467-7660.00131 Lee J, 1999, POPUL DEV REV, V25, P33, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4457.1999.00033.x AVAKAME EF, 1999, VIOLENCE AGAINST WOM, V5, P1321, DOI 10.1177/10778019922183390 Lee James Z, 1999, ONE QUARTER HUMANITY Fan CC, 1998, ANN ASSOC AM GEOGR, V88, P227, DOI 10.1111/1467-8306.00092 Wolf AP, 1998, J FAM HIST, V23, P90, DOI 10.1177/036319909802300105 Campbell Cameron, 1997, FATE FORTUNE RURAL C Wang F, 1996, POPUL DEV REV, V22, P299 Lloyd KM, 1996, SOC FORCES, V74, P1097, DOI 10.2307/2580394 TULJAPURKAR S, 1995, SCIENCE, V267, P874, DOI 10.1126/science.7846529 Gu B, 1995, Asia Pac Popul J, V10, P17 BREWSTER KL, 1994, DEMOGRAPHY, V31, P603, DOI 10.2307/2061794 COALE AJ, 1994, DEMOGRAPHY, V31, P459, DOI 10.2307/2061752 BILLY JO, 1994, J MARRIAGE FAM, V56, P387, DOI 10.2307/353107 Laumann EO, 1994, SOCIAL ORG SEXUALITY MCLAUGHLIN DK, 1993, J MARRIAGE FAM, V55, P827, DOI 10.2307/352765 FOSSETT MA, 1993, J MARRIAGE FAM, V55, P288, DOI 10.2307/352802 BUSS DM, 1993, PSYCHOL REV, V100, P204, DOI 10.1037/0033-295X.100.2.204 Yi Z., 1993, POPUL DEV REV, V19, P283, DOI 10.2307/2938438 LICHTER DT, 1992, AM SOCIOL REV, V57, P781, DOI 10.2307/2096123 FEINGOLD A, 1992, PSYCHOL BULL, V112, P125, DOI 10.1037/0033-2909.112.1.125 BILLY JOG, 1992, SOC FORCES, V70, P977, DOI 10.2307/2580198 SOUTH SJ, 1992, DEMOGRAPHY, V29, P247, DOI 10.2307/2061730 Sen A, 1992, INEQUALITY REEXAMINE COALE AJ, 1991, POPUL DEV REV, V17, P517, DOI 10.2307/1971953 JOHANSSON S, 1991, POPUL DEV REV, V17, P35, DOI 10.2307/1972351 OBRIEN RM, 1991, CRIMINOLOGY, V29, P99, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.1991.tb01060.x Pedersen F. A., 1991, HUMAN NATURE, V2, P271, DOI 10.1007/BF02692189 Lavely W., 1991, MARRIAGE INEQUALITY, P286 LICHTER DT, 1991, AM J SOCIOL, V96, P843, DOI 10.1086/229610 Banister J., 1991, CHINAS CHANGING POPU HULL TH, 1990, POPUL DEV REV, V16, P63, DOI 10.2307/1972529 COALE AJ, 1989, SOC FORCES, V67, P833, DOI 10.2307/2579704 TRENT K, 1989, J MARRIAGE FAM, V51, P391, DOI 10.2307/352502 BUSS DM, 1989, BEHAV BRAIN SCI, V12, P1 SCHOEN R, 1988, AM SOCIOL REV, V53, P895, DOI 10.2307/2095898 SOUTH SJ, 1988, AM J SOCIOL, V93, P1096, DOI 10.1086/228865 SOUTH SJ, 1988, J MARRIAGE FAM, V50, P19, DOI 10.2307/352424 SOUTH SJ, 1987, SOCIOL QUART, V28, P171, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1987.tb00289.x WOLF AP, 1986, POPUL DEV REV, V12, P101, DOI 10.2307/1973353 ZENG Y, 1985, POPUL DEV REV, V11, P721 Wolf Margery, 1985, REVOLUTION POSTPONED Guttentag M., 1983, TOO MANY WOMEN SEX R Wolf A. P., 1980, MARRIAGE ADOPTION CH Blau P.M, 1977, INEQUALITY HETEROGEN NR 90 TC 1 Z9 1 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD SEP PY 2011 VL 90 IS 1 BP 247 EP 267 PG 21 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 809EY UT WOS:000294035800012 ER PT J AU Warner, TD Manning, WD Giordano, PC Longmore, MA AF Warner, Tara D. Manning, Wendy D. Giordano, Peggy C. Longmore, Monica A. TI Relationship Formation and Stability in Emerging Adulthood: Do Sex Ratios Matter? SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID UNITED-STATES; MATE AVAILABILITY; FAMILY-STRUCTURE; ROMANTIC RELATIONSHIPS; CONTEXTUAL INFLUENCES; MARITAL DISSOLUTION; MARRIAGEABLE MEN; ALTERNATIVES; COHABITATION; ADOLESCENTS AB Research links sex ratios with the likelihood of marriage and divorce. However, whether sex ratios similarly influence precursors to marriage (transitions in and out of dating or cohabiting relationships) is unknown. Utilizing data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study and the 2000 U.S. Census, this study assesses whether sex ratios influence the formation and stability of emerging adults' romantic relationships. Findings show that relationship formation is unaffected by partner availability, yet the presence of partners increases women's odds of cohabiting, decreases men's odds of cohabiting, and increases number of dating partners and cheating among men. It appears that sex ratios influence not only transitions in and out of marriage, but also the process through which individuals search for and evaluate partners prior to marriage. C1 [Warner, Tara D.; Manning, Wendy D.; Giordano, Peggy C.; Longmore, Monica A.] Bowling Green State Univ, Bowling Green, OH 43403 USA. RP Warner, TD (reprint author), 222 Williams Hall, Bowling Green, OH 43402 USA EM twarner@bgsu.edu CR Uecker JE, 2010, SOCIOL QUART, V51, P408 Raley RK, 2010, SOCIOL SPECTRUM, V30, P65, DOI 10.1080/02732170903346205 Meier A, 2009, J MARRIAGE FAM, V71, P510 Cherlin A. J., 2009, MARRIAGE GO ROUND ST Browning CR, 2008, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V49, P269 Harknett K, 2008, DEMOGRAPHY, V45, P555 Manning WD, 2007, J MARRIAGE FAM, V69, P559, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2007.00392.x Guzzo KB, 2006, SOC SCI RES, V35, P332, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2004.05.005 Giordano PC, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P260 Joyner K, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P563 Manning WD, 2005, SOC SCI RES, V34, P384, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2004.03.001 McKinnish TG, 2004, AM ECON REV, V94, P322, DOI 10.1257/0002828041301911 Arnett J. J., 2004, EMERGING ADULTHOOD W Manning WD, 2002, J FAM ISSUES, V23, P1065, DOI 10.1177/019251302237303 Ford K, 2002, SEX TRANSM DIS, V29, P13, DOI 10.1097/00007435-200201000-00003 Albrecht CM, 2001, SOCIOL INQ, V71, P67, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2001.tb00928.x Thornton A, 2001, J MARRIAGE FAM, V63, P1009, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.01009.x Sprecher S, 2001, J MARRIAGE FAM, V63, P599, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.00599.x South SJ, 2001, J MARRIAGE FAM, V63, P743, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.00743.x Longmore MA, 2001, J MARRIAGE FAM, V63, P322, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.00322.x Allison P. D., 2001, SAGE U PAPERS SERIES Savin-Williams RitchC, 2001, J ADOLESCENCE, V24, P5 South SJ, 2000, SOC FORCES, V78, P1379, DOI 10.2307/3006178 Blackwell DL, 2000, J FAM ISSUES, V21, P275, DOI 10.1177/019251300021003001 South SJ, 2000, SOC FORCES, V78, P1067, DOI 10.2307/3005942 BLAU F, 2000, IND LABOR RELATIONS, V53, P627 Amato PR, 1997, J MARRIAGE FAM, V59, P612, DOI 10.2307/353949 Smock PJ, 1997, DEMOGRAPHY, V34, P331, DOI 10.2307/3038287 Amato P., 1997, GENERATION RISK GROW KIECOLT KJ, 1997, FAMILY LIFE BLACK AM, P63 Raley RK, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P973, DOI 10.2307/2096303 Lloyd KM, 1996, SOC FORCES, V74, P1097, DOI 10.2307/2580394 Wilson W.J., 1996, WORK DISAPPEARS WORL SOUTH SJ, 1995, AM SOCIOL REV, V60, P21, DOI 10.2307/2096343 FOSSETT MA, 1993, J MARRIAGE FAM, V55, P288, DOI 10.2307/352802 LICHTER DT, 1992, AM SOCIOL REV, V57, P781, DOI 10.2307/2096123 BILLY JOG, 1992, SOC FORCES, V70, P977, DOI 10.2307/2580198 SOUTH SJ, 1992, J MARRIAGE FAM, V54, P440, DOI 10.2307/353075 FOSSETT MA, 1991, J MARRIAGE FAM, V53, P941, DOI 10.2307/352999 LICHTER DT, 1991, AM J SOCIOL, V96, P843, DOI 10.1086/229610 FOSSETT MA, 1990, RURAL SOCIOL, V55, P305 FELMLEE D, 1990, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V53, P13, DOI 10.2307/2786866 OPPENHEIMER VK, 1988, AM J SOCIOL, V94, P563, DOI 10.1086/229030 FARBER B, 1987, J FAM ISSUES, V8, P431, DOI 10.1177/019251387008004009 TEACHMAN JD, 1987, SOC FORCES, V66, P239, DOI 10.2307/2578910 Guttentag M., 1983, TOO MANY WOMEN SEX R Becker Gary S., 1981, TREATISE FAMILY UDRY JR, 1981, J MARRIAGE FAM, V43, P889, DOI 10.2307/351345 NR 48 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD SEP PY 2011 VL 90 IS 1 BP 269 EP 295 PG 27 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 809EY UT WOS:000294035800013 ER PT J AU ter Bogt, TFM Delsing, MJMH van Zalk, M Christenson, PG Meeus, WHJ AF ter Bogt, Tom F. M. Delsing, Marc J. M. H. van Zalk, Maarten Christenson, Peter G. Meeus, Wim H. J. TI Intergenerational Continuity of Taste: Parental and Adolescent Music Preferences SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID CHANGING HIGHBROW TASTE; HEAVY-METAL MUSIC; CULTURAL PARTICIPATION; PERSONALITY; TRANSMISSION; CONSUMPTION; OMNIVORE; GENDER; ISRAEL; STYLE AB In this article, the continuity in music taste from parents to their children is discussed via a multi-actor design. In our models music preferences of 325 adolescents and both their parents were linked, with parental and adolescent educational level as covariates. Parents' preferences for different types of music that had been popular when they were young were subsumed under the general labels of Pop, Rock and Highbrow. Current adolescent music preferences resolved into Pop, Rock, Highbrow and Dance. Among partners in a couple, tastes were similar; for both generations, education was linked to taste; and parental preferences predicted adolescent music choices. More specifically, the preference of fathers and mothers for Pop was associated with adolescent preferences for Pop and Dance. Parents' preferences for Rock seemed to indicate their daughters would also like Rock music, but not their sons. Parental passion for Highbrow music was associated with Highbrow preferences among their children. It is concluded that preferences for cultural artifacts such as (popular) music show continuity from generation to generation. C1 [ter Bogt, Tom F. M.] Univ Utrecht, Dept Interdisciplinary Social Sci, NL-3584 CS Utrecht, Netherlands. [Delsing, Marc J. M. H.] Radboud Univ Nijmegen, Nijmegen, Netherlands. [van Zalk, Maarten] Univ Orebro, Orebro, Sweden. [Christenson, Peter G.] Lewis & Clark Coll, Portland, OR USA. RP ter Bogt, TFM (reprint author), Univ Utrecht, Dept Interdisciplinary Social Sci, Heidelberglaan 2, NL-3584 CS Utrecht, Netherlands EM t.f.m.terbogt@uu.nl CR Mulder J, 2010, PSYCHOL MUSIC, V38, P67, DOI 10.1177/0305735609104349 Selfhout MHW, 2009, J ADOLESCENCE, V32, P95, DOI 10.1016/j.adolescence.2007.11.004 Delsing MJMH, 2008, EUR J PERSONALITY, V22, P109, DOI 10.1002/per.665 Janssen SMJ, 2007, MEMORY, V15, P755, DOI 10.1080/09658210701539646 Katz-Gerro T, 2007, POETICS, V35, P152, DOI 10.1016/j.poetic.2007.03.003 Grusec J. E., 2007, HDB SOCIALIZATION TH, P284 Lizardo O, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P778 Rentfrow PJ, 2006, PSYCHOL SCI, V17, P236, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2006.01691.x van Wel F, 2006, POETICS, V34, P65, DOI 10.1016/j.poetic.2005.06.001 Katz-Gerro T, 2006, SOCIOL SPECTRUM, V26, P63, DOI 10.1080/02732170500368701 van Eijck K, 2005, EUR SOCIOL REV, V21, P513, DOI 10.1093/esr/jci038 CAMPBELL M, 2005, BEAT GOES INTRO POPU LOPEZSINTAS, 2005, POETICS, V33, P299 NAGEL I, 2004, CULTUURDEELNAME LEVE Rentfrow PJ, 2003, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V84, P1236, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.84.6.1236 Schwartz KD, 2003, J YOUTH ADOLESCENCE, V32, P205, DOI 10.1023/A:1022547520656 TERBOGT T, 2003, NETHERLANDS J SOCIAL, V39, P35 Katz-Gerro T, 2002, SOC FORCES, V81, P207, DOI 10.1353/sof.2002.0050 MEEUS WHJ, 2002, CONAMORE CONFL UNPUB NAGEL I, 2002, NETHERLANDS J SOCIAL, V38, P102 Neuhoff H, 2001, KOLNER Z SOZIOL SOZ, V53, P751, DOI 10.1007/s11577-001-0108-0 Tarrant M, 2001, J SOC PSYCHOL, V141, P565 van Eijck K, 2001, SOC FORCES, V79, P1163 de Graaf PM, 2001, ACTA SOCIOL, V44, P51 Stevens F., 2001, SPEELPLAATS ALS CULT KRAAYKAMP G, 2001, COMMUNICATIONS, V26, P9 DeNora T., 2000, MUSIC EVERYDAY LIFE Raaijmakers QAW, 1999, EDUC PSYCHOL MEAS, V59, P725, DOI 10.1177/0013164499595001 Van Eijck K, 1999, POETICS, V26, P309, DOI 10.1016/S0304-422X(99)00008-X REYNOLDS S, 1999, GENERATION ECSTASY W ROSENGREN KE, 1999, MEDIA EFFECTS CULTUR Hu LT, 1998, PSYCHOL METHODS, V3, P424, DOI 10.1037/1082-989X.3.4.424 Christenson P.G., 1998, ITS NOT ONLY ROCK N ROE K, 1998, EUROPEAN J COMMUNICA, V23, P5 HUSTINX P, 1998, MILIEU SEKSE ETNICIT van Eijck K, 1997, POETICS, V25, P195, DOI 10.1016/S0304-422X(97)00017-X McCown W, 1997, PERS INDIV DIFFER, V23, P543, DOI 10.1016/S0191-8869(97)00085-8 Bryson B, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P884, DOI 10.2307/2096459 Peterson RA, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P900, DOI 10.2307/2096460 GAROFALO R, 1996, ROCKIN OUT POPULAR M Mohr J., 1995, RES SOCIAL STRATIFIC, V14, P167 Smith T, 1994, POP MUSIC SOC, V18, P43 VANWEL F, 1994, INT J ADOLESCENCE YO, V4, P211 DIMAGGIO P, 1994, SOCIAL STRATIFICATIO, P542 PETERSON RA, 1992, POETICS, V21, P243, DOI 10.1016/0304-422X(92)90008-Q Roe Keith, 1992, EUROPEAN J COMMUNICA, V7, P335, DOI 10.1177/0267323192007003002 LAMONT M, 1992, CULTIVATING DIFFEREN, P1 DOWD TJ, 1992, VOCABULARIES PUBLIC, P130 ARNETT J, 1991, J YOUTH ADOLESCENCE, V20, P573, DOI 10.1007/BF01537363 ARNETT J, 1991, YOUTH SOC, V23, P76, DOI 10.1177/0044118X91023001004 HOLBROOK MB, 1989, J CONSUM RES, V16, P119, DOI 10.1086/209200 HALVERSON CF, 1988, J PERS, V56, P435, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-6494.1988.tb00895.x LULL J, 1987, POPULAR MUSIC COMMUN, P140 GROTEVANT, 1985, CHILD DEV, V56, P415 Bourdieu P, 1984, DISTINCTION SOCIAL C GROSSBERG L, 1984, POP MUSIC, V4, P225, DOI 10.1017/S0261143000006243 Frith S., 1981, SOUND EFFECTS YOUTH Gans H. J., 1974, POPULAR CULTURE HIGH GILLETT C, 1970, SOUND CITY RISE ROCK SIMMEL G, 1957, AM J SOCIOL, V62, P541, DOI 10.1086/222102 WEBER M, 1947, M WEBER ESSAYS SOCIO Ter Bogt T., SUBSTANCE U IN PRESS NR 62 TC 1 Z9 1 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD SEP PY 2011 VL 90 IS 1 BP 297 EP 319 PG 23 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 809EY UT WOS:000294035800014 ER PT J AU Western, B Rosenfeld, J AF Western, Bruce Rosenfeld, Jake TI Unions, Norms, and the Rise in U.S. Wage Inequality SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE wages; inequality; unions; labor markets; norms ID UNITED-STATES; LABOR-MARKET; TECHNOLOGICAL-CHANGE; SOCIAL NORMS; DISPERSION; INSTITUTIONS; EARNINGS; ECONOMY; DECLINE; THREAT AB From 1973 to 2007, private sector union membership in the United States declined from 34 to 8 percent for men and from 16 to 6 percent for women. During this period, inequality in hourly wages increased by over 40 percent. We report a decomposition, relating rising inequality to the union wage distribution's shrinking weight. We argue that unions helped institutionalize norms of equity, reducing the dispersion of nonunion wages in highly unionized regions and industries. Accounting for unions' effect on union and nonunion wages suggests that the decline of organized labor explains a fifth to a third of the growth in inequality-an effect comparable to the growing stratification of wages by education. C1 [Western, Bruce] Harvard Univ, Wiener Ctr Social Policy, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA. [Rosenfeld, Jake] Univ Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. RP Western, B (reprint author), Harvard Univ, Wiener Ctr Social Policy, 33 Kirkland St, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA EM western@wjh.harvard.edu CR LEVY F, 2011, EC EVOLUTION REVOLUT, P357 Mouw T, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P402, DOI 10.1177/0003122410363564 COWIE J, 2010, STAYIN ALIVE 1970S L Hacker Jacob S., 2010, WINNER TAKE ALL POLI BLOOM N, 2010, WP16019 NAT BUR EC R Tope D, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P842 Card D, 2009, AM ECON REV, V99, P1, DOI 10.1257/aer.99.2.1 Autor D, 2009, AM ECON REV, V99, P45, DOI 10.1257/aer.99.2.45 Lemieux T, 2009, Q J ECON, V124, P1 Bollinger C.R., 2009, WAGE GAP ESTIMATION BRUCE W, 2009, SOCIOL METHODOL, V39, P293 Hirsch BT, 2008, J ECON PERSPECT, V22, P153, DOI 10.1257/jep.22.1.153 Autor DH, 2008, REV ECON STAT, V90, P300, DOI 10.1162/rest.90.2.300 Lemieux T, 2008, J POPUL ECON, V21, P21, DOI 10.1007/s00148-007-0169-0 *US BUR CENS, 2007, STAT ABSTR US 2007 GOMEZ R, 2006, 720 CEP LOND SCH EC Gottschalk P, 2005, REV INCOME WEALTH, P231 Farber HS, 2005, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V58, P335 Card D, 2004, J LABOR RES, V25, P519, DOI 10.1007/s12122-004-1011-z Hirsch BT, 2004, J LABOR ECON, V22, P689, DOI 10.1086/383112 Hirsch BT, 2004, J LABOR RES, V25, P233, DOI 10.1007/s12122-004-1035-4 Autor DH, 2003, Q J ECON, V118, P1279, DOI 10.1162/003355303322552801 Piketty T, 2003, Q J ECON, V118, P1, DOI 10.1162/00335530360535135 Card D, 2002, J LABOR ECON, V20, P733, DOI 10.1086/342055 Acemoglu D, 2002, J ECON LIT, V40, P7, DOI 10.1257/0022051026976 Farber HS, 2001, J LABOR RES, V22, P459, DOI 10.1007/s12122-001-1017-8 Card D, 2001, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V54, P296, DOI 10.2307/2696012 ROBERTO F, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P273 CAPPELLI P, 2001, SOURCEBOOK LABOR MAR, P207 Voss K, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P303, DOI 10.1086/316963 ULMAN L, 1998, IND RELATIONS RES AS, V1, P168 MITCHELL DJB, 1998, IND RELATIONS RES AS, V1, P176 MATUSOW AJ, 1998, NIXONS EC BOOM BUSTS Cline William R., 1997, TRADE INCOME DISTRIB Jacoby Sanford M, 1997, MODERN MANORS WELFAR DINARDO J, 1997, 6318 NAT BUR EC RES DiNardo J, 1996, ECONOMETRICA, V64, P1001, DOI 10.2307/2171954 Card D, 1996, ECONOMETRICA, V64, P957, DOI 10.2307/2171852 NEUMARK D, 1995, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V49, P20, DOI 10.2307/2524910 Boyle Kevin, 1995, UAW HEYDAY AM LIBERA Lichtenstein Nelson, 1995, MOST DANGEROUS MAN D DERICKSON A, 1994, J AM HIST, V80, P1333, DOI 10.2307/2080603 Quadagno Jill, 1994, COLOR WELFARE RACISM Freeman R. B., 1993, UNEVEN TIDES RISING, P133 CARD D, 1992, 4195 NAT BUR EC RES BELMAN D, 1990, REV ECON STAT, V72, P148, DOI 10.2307/2109751 LEICHT KT, 1989, AM SOCIOL REV, V54, P1035, DOI 10.2307/2095722 ELSTER J, 1989, J ECON PERSPECT, V3, P99 Draper Alan, 1989, ROPE SAND AFL CIO CO ELSTER J, 1989, ACTA SOCIOL, V32, P113 SWENSON P, 1989, FIAR SHARES UNIONS P KAHN LM, 1987, REV ECON STAT, V69, P600, DOI 10.2307/1935954 MACPHERSON DA, 1987, J LABOR RES, V8, P395, DOI 10.1007/BF02685222 GOLDFIELD M, 1987, DECLINE ORGANIZED LA Freeman RB, 1984, WHAT DO UNIONS DO COX JC, 1982, ECON INQ, V20, P533 GOLDFARB RS, 1981, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V34, P191, DOI 10.2307/2522535 FREEMAN RB, 1981, REV ECON STAT, V63, P561, DOI 10.2307/1935852 FREEMAN RB, 1980, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V34, P3, DOI 10.2307/2522631 FOULKES F, 1980, PERSONNEL POLICIES L KAU JB, 1978, J POLIT ECON, V86, P337, DOI 10.1086/260673 DUNLOP JT, 1977, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V31, P14, DOI 10.2307/2522505 HYMAN R, 1976, SOCIAL VALUES IND RE THOMPSON EP, 1971, PAST PRESENT, P76 Polanyi K., 1957, GREAT TRANSFORMATION Ross HG, 1954, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V7, P200, DOI 10.2307/2518857 Webb S., 1911, IND DEMOCRACY *UN RES CORP, CPS UT MERG OUTG ROT *US BUR CENS, CURR POP SURV 1980 M NR 69 TC 2 Z9 2 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD AUG PY 2011 VL 76 IS 4 BP 513 EP 537 DI 10.1177/0003122411414817 PG 25 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 800HX UT WOS:000293351500001 ER PT J AU Tomaskovic-Devey, D Lin, KH AF Tomaskovic-Devey, Donald Lin, Ken-Hou TI Income Dynamics, Economic Rents, and the Financialization of the U.S. Economy SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE income inequality; financialization; market; neoliberalism; institution ID EARNINGS INEQUALITY; SHAREHOLDER VALUE; UNITED-STATES; WALL-STREET; RISE; MALFEASANCE AB The 2008 collapse of the world financial system, while proximately linked to the housing bubble and risk-laden mortgage backed securities, was a consequence of the financialization of the U.S. economy since the 1970s. This article examines the institutional and income dynamics associated with the financialization of the U.S. economy, advancing a sociological explanation of income shifts into the finance sector. Complementary developments include banking deregulation, finance industry concentration, increased size and scope of institutional investors, the shareholder value movement, and dominance of the neoliberal policy model. As a result, we estimate that between 5.8 and 6.6 trillion dollars were transferred to the finance sector since 1980. We conclude that understanding inequality dynamics requires attention to market institutions and politics. C1 [Tomaskovic-Devey, Donald; Lin, Ken-Hou] Univ Massachusetts, Dept Sociol, Amherst, MA 01003 USA. RP Tomaskovic-Devey, D (reprint author), Univ Massachusetts, Dept Sociol, Amherst, MA 01003 USA EM tomaskovic-devey@soc.umass.edu CR Krippner Greta, 2011, CAPITALIZING CRISIS DOBBIN F, 2011, MARKETS TRIAL EC B A, V30, P29 Hacker JS, 2010, POLIT SOC, V38, P152, DOI 10.1177/0032329210365042 Prechel H, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P331, DOI 10.1177/0003122410372229 Kenworthy L, 2010, POLIT SOC, V38, P255, DOI 10.1177/0032329210365049 Kaplan SN, 2010, REV FINANC STUD, V23, P1004, DOI 10.1093/rfs/hhp006 Sakamoto A, 2010, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V53, P19, DOI 10.1525/sop.2010.53.1.19 Lewis M, 2010, BIG SHORT INSIDE DOO King M, 2010, INTEGRATED PUBLIC US Harvey D., 2010, ENIGMA CAPITAL CRISI FLIGSTEIN N, 2010, MARKETS TRIAL EC A A, V30, P57 GUILLEN MF, 2010, MARKETS TRIAL EC A A, V30, P257, DOI 10.1108/S0733-558X(2010)000030A012 KRIPPNER G, 2010, MARKETS TRIAL EC B A, V30, P141, DOI 10.1108/S0733-558X(2010)000030B009 Davis G.F., 2009, MANAGED MARKETS FINA Ho K., 2009, LIQUIDATED ETHNOGRAP Philippon T., 2009, 14644 NBER CROTTY J, 2009, 209 U WASH PERI Oyer P, 2008, J FINANC, V63, P2601, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-6261.2008.01409.x Orhangazi O, 2008, NEW DIR MOD ECON, P1 SUM A, 2008, CHALLENGE, V51, P57, DOI 10.2753/0577-5132510304 Fligstein N, 2007, SOCIOL FORUM, V22, P399, DOI 10.1111/j.1573-7861.2007.00044.x Prasad M, 2006, POLITICS FREE MARKET Harvey David, 2005, BRIEF HIST NEOLIBERA KRIPPNER GR, 2005, SOCIO-ECON REV, V3, P173, DOI DOI 10.1093/CJE/BEP036 Crotty J, 2005, FINANCIALIZATION WOR, P77 Epstein G., 2005, FINANCIALIZATION WOR, P46 Dobbin F, 2005, POLIT POWER SOC THEO, V17, P179, DOI 10.1016/S0198-8719(04)17006-3 KRIER D, 2005, SPECULATIVE MANAGEME Stockhammer E, 2004, CAMBRIDGE J ECON, V28, P719, DOI 10.1093/cje/beh032 Roth LM, 2004, SOCIOL FORUM, V19, P203, DOI 10.1023/B:SOFO.0000031980.82004.d7 MORGAN SL, 2004, RES SOCIAL STRATIFIC, V21, P215, DOI 10.1016/S0276-5624(04)21011-3 Fourcade-Gourinchas M, 2002, AM J SOCIOL, V108, P533 Weeden KA, 2002, AM J SOCIOL, V108, P55, DOI 10.1086/344121 Fligstein N, 2001, ARCHITECTURE MARKETS Sorensen AB, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P1523, DOI 10.1086/210463 Tomaskovic-Devey D, 1999, WORK OCCUPATION, V26, P422, DOI 10.1177/0730888499026004003 Tilly C, 1998, DURABLE INEQUALITY Sorensen AB, 1996, AM J SOCIOL, V101, P1333, DOI 10.1086/230825 Useem M., 1993, EXECUTIVE DEFENSE SH Vogel D., 1989, FLUCTUATING FORTUNES Burt R., 1983, CORPORATE PROFITS CO USEEM M, 1983, INNER CIRCLE LARGE C MILLER SM, 1983, RECAPITALIZING AM AL Roemer J.E., 1982, GEN THEORY EXPLOITAT KALLEBERG AL, 1981, AM J SOCIOL, V87, P651, DOI 10.1086/227499 TOMASKOVICDEVEY, 1981, SOC POLICY, V11, P8 Parkin F, 1979, MARXISM CLASS THEORY JENSEN MC, 1976, J FINANC ECON, V3, P305, DOI 10.1016/0304-405X(76)90026-X Baran P. A., 1966, MONOPOLY CAPITAL ESS NR 49 TC 1 Z9 1 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD AUG PY 2011 VL 76 IS 4 BP 538 EP 559 DI 10.1177/0003122411414827 PG 22 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 800HX UT WOS:000293351500002 ER PT J AU Kuwabara, K AF Kuwabara, Ko TI Cohesion, Cooperation, and the Value of Doing Things Together: How Economic Exchange Creates Relational Bonds SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE trust; cohesion; social exchange; cooperation ID SOCIAL-EXCHANGE; NEGOTIATED EXCHANGE; RECIPROCAL EXCHANGE; GIFT EXCHANGE; TRUST; COMMITMENT; RISK; UNCERTAINTY; EMBEDDEDNESS; EMERGENCE AB A recent debate in sociological exchange theory concerns which form of exchange is likely to promote cohesion in exchange relations. One side maintains that bilateral exchange, often associated with economic transactions, entails joint action to share mutual benefits, contributing more to feelings of cohesion than do independent acts of unilateral giving from one person to another, typical of social exchange. The other side argues that bilateral exchange requires dividing resources under binding terms of exchange, which strains relationships by underscoring competitive aspects of exchange. The present study reconciles these divergent claims by testing a new model of exchange that combines key propositions from past theories to specify when bilateral exchange promotes or undermines cohesion. Results from two laboratory experiments provide support for the model's core claim that cooperative forms of bilateral exchange can reinforce cohesion more than unilateral exchange does, contrary to the enduring assumption that economic exchange undermines relational bonds. C1 Columbia Univ, New York, NY 10027 USA. RP Kuwabara, K (reprint author), Columbia Univ, 703 Uris Hall,3022 Broadway, New York, NY 10027 USA EM kk2558@columbia.edu CR Molm LD, 2010, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V73, P119, DOI 10.1177/0190272510369079 Kuwabara Ko, 2010, ADV GROUP PROCESSES, P239 Schaefer DR, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P551 Molm LD, 2009, SOCIOL THEOR, V27, P1, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9558.2009.00336.x Curhan JR, 2008, ORGAN BEHAV HUM DEC, V107, P192, DOI 10.1016/j.obhdp.2008.02.009 Lawler EJ, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P519 Ingram P, 2008, RES ORGAN BEHAV, V28, P167, DOI 10.1016/j.riob.2008.04.006 Barrera D, 2007, SOC NETWORKS, V29, P508, DOI 10.1016/j.socnet.2007.03.004 Molm LD, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P205, DOI 10.1086/517900 Molm LD, 2007, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V70, P199 Lawler Edward J., 2007, RES MANAGING GROUPS, V1, P185 Molm LD, 2006, SOC FORCES, V84, P2331, DOI 10.1353/sof.2006.0100 Kollock Peter, 2006, ADV GROUP PROCESSES, P283 Cook KS, 2005, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V68, P121 Zelizer VA, 2005, PURCHASE OF INTIMACY, P1 Heyman J, 2004, PSYCHOL SCI, V15, P787, DOI 10.1111/j.0956-7976.2004.00757.x Bienenstock EJ, 2004, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V67, P310 Molm LD, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P128, DOI 10.2307/3088905 Terai Shigeru, 2003, RES SOCIAL P SYCHOL, V18, P172 Hardin R., 2002, TRUST TRUSTWORTHINES Lawler EJ, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P321, DOI 10.1086/324071 Cook KS, 2001, TRUST SOC Lawler EJ, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P616, DOI 10.1086/318965 Molm LD, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P1396, DOI 10.1086/210434 Molm LD, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P876, DOI 10.2307/2657408 Wieselquist J, 1999, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V77, P942, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.77.5.942 Uzzi B, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P481, DOI 10.2307/2657252 Lawler EJ, 1999, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V25, P217, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.25.1.217 Lawler EJ, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P871, DOI 10.2307/2657506 Yamagishi T, 1998, AM J SOCIOL, V104, P165, DOI 10.1086/210005 Fehr E, 1998, EUR ECON REV, V42, P1, DOI 10.1016/S0014-2921(96)00051-7 Lawler EJ, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P89, DOI 10.2307/2096408 Kramer R., 1996, TRUST ORG FRONTIERS KOLLOCK P, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V100, P313, DOI 10.1086/230539 MOLM LD, 1994, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V57, P163, DOI 10.2307/2786874 LAWLER EJ, 1993, AM SOCIOL REV, V58, P465, DOI 10.2307/2096071 LAWLER EJ, 1992, AM SOCIOL REV, V57, P327, DOI 10.2307/2096239 Coleman J.S, 1990, FDN SOCIAL THEORY BARON RM, 1986, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V51, P1173, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.51.6.1173 GRANOVETTER M, 1985, AM J SOCIOL, V91, P481, DOI 10.1086/228311 Pruitt D. G., 1981, NEGOTIATION BEHAV CLARK MS, 1979, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V37, P12, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.37.1.12 Becker G. S., 1976, EC APPROACH HUMAN BE EMERSON RM, 1976, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V2, P335, DOI 10.1146/annurev.so.02.080176.002003 Sahlins Marshall, 1972, STONE AGE EC Levi-Strauss C, 1969, ELEMENTARY STRUCTURE Berger PL, 1966, SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION Blau P.M, 1964, EXCHANGE POWER SOCIA Homans G., 1961, SOCIAL BEHAV ITS ELE GOULDNER AW, 1960, AM SOCIOL REV, V25, P161, DOI 10.2307/2092623 Thibaut J.W., 1959, SOCIAL PSYCHOL GROUP NR 51 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD AUG PY 2011 VL 76 IS 4 BP 560 EP 580 DI 10.1177/0003122411414825 PG 21 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 800HX UT WOS:000293351500003 ER PT J AU Terriquez, V AF Terriquez, Veronica TI Schools for Democracy: Labor Union Participation and Latino Immigrant Parents' School-Based Civic Engagement SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE civic engagement; union activism; immigrant incorporation; parental school involvement ID POLITICAL-PARTICIPATION; VOTER TURNOUT; UNITED-STATES; MOVEMENT; IMPACT; MOBILIZATION; COMMITMENT; DECLINE AB Scholars have long argued that civic organizations play a vital role in developing members' civic capacity. Yet few empirical studies examine how and the extent to which civic skills transfer across distinct and separate civic contexts. Focusing on Latino immigrant members of a Los Angeles janitors' labor union, this article fills a void by investigating union members' involvement in an independent civic arena-their children's schools. Analyses of random sample survey and semi-structured interview data demonstrate that labor union experience does not simply lead to more civic engagement, as previous research might suggest. Rather, conceptual distinctions must be made between active and inactive union members and between different types of civic engagement. Results show that active union members are not particularly involved in plug-in types of involvement, which are typically defined and dictated by school personnel. Instead, active union members tend to become involved in critical forms of engagement that allow them to voice their interests and exercise leadership. Furthermore, findings suggest that the problem solving, advocacy, and organizing skills acquired through union participation do not uniformly influence members' civic engagement. Experience in a social movement union serves as a catalyst for civic engagement for some, while it enhances the leadership capacity of others. C1 Univ So Calif, Dept Sociol, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA. RP Terriquez, V (reprint author), Univ So Calif, Dept Sociol, 3620 S Vermont Blvd,Kaprielian Hall 352, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA EM veronica.terriquez@college.usc.edu CR Eliasoph N, 2011, PRINC STUD CULT, P1 Rosenfeld J, 2010, SOC SCI QUART, V91, P379 Nissen Bruce, 2010, LABOR STUDIES J, V35, P51 Voss K., 2010, TRANSFER EUROPEAN RE, V16, P369 Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2010, UN MEMB SUMM Gandara P, 2009, LATINO ED CRISIS CON Kahne JE, 2008, AM EDUC RES J, V45, P738, DOI 10.3102/0002831208316951 Waldinger R, 2008, INT MIGR REV, V42, P3, DOI 10.1111/j.1747-7379.2007.00112.x Ramakrishnan S. Karthick, 2008, CIVIC HOPES POLITICA TEPPER S, 2008, ENGAGING ART NEXT GR, P17 ROGERS J, 2008, NW J LAW SOCIAL POLI, V3, P201 California Department of Education, 2008, SCH INF FORM 2006 07 Stoll MA, 2007, INT MIGR REV, V41, P880, DOI 10.1111/j.1747-7379.2007.00104.x Leighley JE, 2007, J POLIT, V69, P430 Turner Lowell, 2007, LABOR NEW URBAN BATT Stephen's Lynn, 2007, TRANSBORDER LIVES IN Narro Victor, 2007, NEW LABOR FORUM, V16, P49, DOI 10.1080/1095760601113381 Rogers J, 2006, HARVARD EDUC REV, V76, P611 Wong J, 2006, DEMOCRACYS PROMISE I Oakes J., 2006, LEARNING POWER ORG E MARSCHALL M, 2006, REV POLICY RES, V23, P1053, DOI 10.1111/j.1541-1338.2006.00249.x Milkman Ruth, 2006, LA STORY IMMIGRANT W Zlolniski C, 2006, JANITORS, STREET VENDORS, AND ACTIVISTS: THE LIVES OF MEXICAN IMMIGRANTS IN SILICON VALLEY, P1 ROGERS J, 2006, CALIFORNIA ED OPPORT RAMAKRISHNAN SK, 2006, CIVIC INEQUALITIES I Lichterman Paul, 2006, THEOR SOC, V35, P529 Cain Bruce, 2006, TRANSFORMING POLITIC, P89 Ramakrishnan SK, 2006, RACE ETHN POLIT, P243 Martinez LM, 2005, SOC FORCES, V84, P135, DOI 10.1353/sof.2005.0113 Warren MR, 2005, HARVARD EDUC REV, V75, P133 Lichterman Paul, 2005, ELUSIVE TOGETHERNESS Theiss-Morse E, 2005, ANNU REV POLIT SCI, V8, P227, DOI 10.1146/annurev.polisci.8.082103.104829 Bedolla LG, 2005, FLUID BORDERS: LATINO POWER, IDENTITY, AND POLITICS IN LOS ANGELES, P1 Sobieraj Sara, 2005, SOCIOLOGICAL Q, V45, P739 Fitzgerald D, 2004, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V27, P228, DOI 10.1080/0141987042000177315 Lopez Steven Henry, 2004, REORGANIZING RUST BE Brown RK, 2003, SOC FORCES, V82, P617, DOI 10.1353/sof.2004.0005 Barreto MA, 2003, HISPANIC J BEHAV SCI, V25, P427, DOI 10.1177/0739986303258599 Fung A, 2003, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V29, P515, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.29.010202.100134 Alba R.D., 2003, REMAKING AM MAINSTRE De Tocqueville A, 2003, DEMOCRACY AM 2 ESSAY Zullo R, 2003, ADV IND LAB, V12, P173 Isaac L, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P722, DOI 10.2307/3088915 Leal DL, 2002, BRIT J POLIT SCI, V32, P353 Henderson A., 2002, NEW WAVE EVIDENCE IM Radcliff B, 2001, J LABOR RES, V22, P405, DOI 10.1007/s12122-001-1042-7 McAdam D., 2001, DYNAMICS CONTENTION Asher H.B., 2001, AM LABOR UNIONS ELEC Voss K, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P303, DOI 10.1086/316963 Putnam R. D., 2000, BOWLING ALONE COLLAP Lareau Annette, 2000, HOME ADVANTAGE SOCIA Fine Janice, 2004, WORKING US, V4, P59, DOI 10.1111/j.1743-4580.2000.00059.x Bruno Robert, 2000, WORKING US, V4, P92, DOI 10.1111/j.1743-4580.2000.00092.x Clawson D, 1999, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V25, P95, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.25.1.95 Skocpol Theda, 1999, CIVIC ENGAGEMENT AM, P249 Eliasoph N., 1998, AVOIDING POLITICS AM WALDINGER R, 1998, ORG WIN NEW RES UNIO, P102 Cornfield Dan, 1998, ORG WIN NEW RES UNIO, P247 Shirley D., 1997, COMMUNITY ORG URBAN FULLAGAR CJA, 1995, J APPL PSYCHOL, V80, P147, DOI 10.1037/0021-9010.80.1.147 Verba S., 1995, VOICE EQUALITY CIVIC EPSTEIN JL, 1991, ELEM SCHOOL J, V91, P289, DOI 10.1086/461656 DELANEY JT, 1988, J LABOR RES, V9, P221, DOI 10.1007/BF02685314 JURAVICH T, 1988, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V41, P374, DOI 10.2307/2523904 KLANDERMANS B, 1987, AM SOCIOL REV, V52, P519, DOI 10.2307/2095297 KLANDERMANS B, 1984, AM SOCIOL REV, V49, P583, DOI 10.2307/2095417 Verba Sidney, 1972, PARTICIPATION AM POL Terriquez Veronica, BICULTURAL PARENT EN NR 68 TC 1 Z9 1 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD AUG PY 2011 VL 76 IS 4 BP 581 EP 601 DI 10.1177/0003122411414815 PG 21 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 800HX UT WOS:000293351500004 ER PT J AU Gonzales, RG AF Gonzales, Roberto G. TI Learning to Be Illegal: Undocumented Youth and Shifting Legal Contexts in the Transition to Adulthood SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE immigrant incorporation; life course; unauthorized status; Latinos; illegality ID UNITED-STATES; IMMIGRANTS; 2ND-GENERATION; CHILDREN; ASSIMILATION; ACHIEVEMENT; CALIFORNIA; DIVERSITY; MOBILITY; STUDENTS AB This article examines the transition to adulthood among 1.5-generation undocumented Latino young adults. For them, the transition to adulthood involves exiting the legally protected status of K to 12 students and entering into adult roles that require legal status as the basis for participation. This collision among contexts makes for a turbulent transition and has profound implications for identity formation, friendship patterns, aspirations and expectations, and social and economic mobility. Undocumented children move from protected to unprotected, from inclusion to exclusion, from de facto legal to illegal. In the process, they must learn to be illegal, a transformation that involves the almost complete retooling of daily routines, survival skills, aspirations, and social patterns. These findings have important implications for studies of the 1.5- and second-generations and the specific and complex ways in which legal status intervenes in their coming of age. The article draws on 150 interviews with undocumented 1.5-generation young adult Latinos in Southern California. C1 Univ Chicago, Sch Social Serv Adm, Chicago, IL 60637 USA. RP Gonzales, RG (reprint author), Univ Chicago, Sch Social Serv Adm, 969 E 60th St, Chicago, IL 60637 USA EM rggonzal@uchicago.edu CR Flores SM, 2010, REV HIGH EDUC, V33, P239 MASSEY DS, 2010, BROKERED BOUNDARIES Nevins J., 2010, OPERATION GATEKEEPER BATALOVA J, 2010, DREAM VS REALITY ANA GONZALES RG, 2010, PEABODY J EDUC, V85, P469 Passel J. S., 2010, US UNAUTHORIZED IMMI Rumbaut Ruben G., 2010, FUTURE CHILD, V20, P39 Marrow HB, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P756 Passel Jeffrey, 2009, PORTRAIT UNAUTHORIZE Rumbaut RG, 2008, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V620, P196, DOI 10.1177/0002716208322957 Portes A, 2008, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V620, P12, DOI 10.1177/0002716208322577 Smith RC, 2008, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V620, P270, DOI 10.1177/0002716208322988 Abrego L, 2008, LAW SOCIAL INQUIRY, V33, P709, DOI 10.1111/j.1747-4469.2008.00119.x Kasinitz P., 2008, INHERITING CITY CHIL Telles E., 2008, GENERATIONS EXCLUSIO Massey Douglas S., 2008, NEW FACES NEW PLACES Suarez-Orozco C., 2008, LEARNING NEW LAND IM ZHOU M, 2008, POSITIVE YOUTH DEV T, P229 Gonzales Roberto G., 2007, IMMIGRATION POLICY F, V5, P13 Willen Sarah S., 2007, INT MIGR, V45, P7 Menjivar C, 2006, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P999, DOI 10.1086/499509 Portes A, 2006, IMMIGRANT AMERICA: A PORTRAIT, 3RD EDITION, P1 Smith RC, 2006, MEXICAN NEW YORK: TRANSNATIONAL LIVES OF NEW IMMIGRANTS, P1 Abrego Leisy J., 2006, LATINO STUDIES, V4, P212, DOI 10.1057/palgrave.lst.8600200 Passel J. S, 2006, SIZE CHARACTERISTICS Cornelius Wayne A., 2006, IMPACTS BORDER ENFOR Rumbaut RG, 2005, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V28, P1041, DOI 10.1080/01419870500224349 Settersten R. A., 2005, FRONTIER ADULTHOOD T Zuniga V., 2005, NEW DESTINATIONS MEX MOLLENKOPF J, 2005, FRONTIER ADULTHOOD T, P454 Olivas Michael A., 2005, IMMIGRATION STORIES, P197 Rumbaut RG, 2004, INT MIGR REV, V38, P1160 Ngai Mae M., 2004, IMPOSSIBLE SUBJECTS Singer Audrey, 2004, RISE NEW IMMIGRANT G Alba R.D., 2003, REMAKING AM MAINSTRE Passel J. S., 2003, FURTHER DEMOGRAPHIC Lucas SR, 2002, SOCIOL EDUC, V75, P328, DOI 10.2307/3090282 Fuligni AJ, 2002, DEV PSYCHOL, V38, P856, DOI 10.1037//0012-1649.38.5.856 Furstenberg FF, 2002, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V580, P6, DOI 10.1177/0002716202580001001 De Genova NP, 2002, ANNU REV ANTHROPOL, V31, P419, DOI 10.1146/annurev.anthro.31.040402.085432 Massey Douglas, 2002, SMOKE MIRRORS MEXICA Portes A., 2001, LEGACIES STORY IMMIG Stanton-Salazar R. D., 2001, MANUFACTURING HOPE D Arnett JJ, 2000, AM PSYCHOL, V55, P469, DOI 10.1037//0003-066X.55.5.469 Coutin S B, 2000, LEGALIZING MOVES SAL Waters M., 1999, BLACK IDENTITIES W I Zhou M., 1998, GROWING AM VIETNAMES Chavez L., 1998, SHADOWED LIVES UNDOC Rumbaut RG, 1997, INT MIGR REV, V31, P923, DOI 10.2307/2547419 Zhou M, 1997, INT MIGR REV, V31, P825 Suarez-Orozco C., 1995, TRANSFORMATIONS MIGR PORTES A, 1993, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V530, P74, DOI 10.1177/0002716293530001006 GANS HJ, 1992, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V15, P173 RINDFUSS RR, 1991, DEMOGRAPHY, V28, P493, DOI 10.2307/2061419 CHAVEZ LR, 1991, AM ETHNOL, V18, P257, DOI 10.1525/ae.1991.18.2.02a00040 BEAN FD, 1987, POPUL DEV REV, V13, P671, DOI 10.2307/1973027 Elder G. H., 1987, SOCIOLOGICAL FORUM, V2, P449, DOI 10.1007/BF01106621 MacLeod J., 1987, AINT NO MAKIN IT ASP Oakes Jeannie, 1985, KEEPING TRACK SCH ST Portes A., 1985, LATIN JOURNEY CUBAN Portes A., 1981, GLOBAL TRENDS MIGRAT, P279 Willis P., 1977, LEARNING LABOUR WORK Erikson E. H., 1950, CHILDHOOD SOC Gleeson Shannon, INT MIGRATION NR 64 TC 3 Z9 3 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD AUG PY 2011 VL 76 IS 4 BP 602 EP 619 DI 10.1177/0003122411411901 PG 18 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 800HX UT WOS:000293351500005 ER PT J AU Buyukokutan, B AF Buyukokutan, Baris TI Toward a Theory of Cultural Appropriation: Buddhism, the Vietnam War, and the Field of U.S. Poetry SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE intellectuals; culture; exchange theory; social movements; appropriation ID SOCIAL-MOVEMENTS; DIFFUSION; EXCHANGE; IDENTITY; POLITICS AB Culture and politics have a close relationship, but how exactly does the cultural become the political? This article builds a theoretical framework for this question by examining Vietnamera U.S. poets' politicization of Buddhism at the expense of more effective or more easily controllable discursive resources. I find, first, that outcomes depend on whether wouldbe appropriators and legitimate owners of the appropriated resource can strike a mutually beneficial bargain. Second, whether two such distinct parties emerge depends on how tightly contexts of the appropriation process are linked. Consequently, appropriation is best understood as reciprocal exchange. C1 Bogazici Univ, Dept Sociol, TR-34342 Istanbul, Turkey. RP Buyukokutan, B (reprint author), Bogazici Univ, Dept Sociol, TR-34342 Istanbul, Turkey EM baris.buyukokutan@boun.edu.tr CR BUYUKOKUTAN B, 2010, POLITICAL POWER SOCI, V21, P3 BUYUKOKUTAN B, 2010, THESIS U MICHIGAN AN MUNROE A, 2009, 3 MIND AM ARTISTS CO Downey DJ, 2008, RES SOC MOV CONFL CH, V28, P3, DOI 10.1016/S0163-786X(08)28001-8 HALLGRIMSDOTTIR, 2007, SOC FORCES, V85, P1393 ANDERSON D, 2007, WAR NEVER ENDS NEW P Dezeuze A, 2006, AVANT GARDE CRIT STU, V20, P49 Molnar V, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P111 Koopmans R, 2005, MOBILIZATION, V10, P19 FREDMAN S, 2005, CONCISE COMPANION 20 GOLDSTEINGIDONI O, 2005, J CONSUM CULT, V5, P155, DOI 10.1177/1469540505053092 MORGAN D, 2004, BUDDHIST EXPERIENCE Molm LD, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P128, DOI 10.2307/3088905 Tate G, 2003, EVERYTHING BURDEN WH Alexander J. C, 2003, MEANINGS SOCIAL LIFE Snodgrass J., 2003, PRESENTING JAPANESE SCHNEIDER A, 2003, SOCIAL ANTHR, V11, P215, DOI 10.1017/S0964028203000156 Isaac L, 2002, AM J SOCIOL, V108, P353, DOI 10.1086/344810 Marx Ferree M., 2002, SHAPING ABORTION DIS Wejnert B, 2002, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V28, P297, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.28.110601.141051 Rabinovitch Celia, 2002, SURREALISM SACRED PO POSSAMAI A, 2002, J CONSUM CULT, V2, P197 Delgado R., 2001, CRITICAL RACE THEORY Swidler A, 2001, TALK LOVE CULTURE MA Chin Elizabeth, 2001, PURCHASING POWER BLA HAKUTANI Y, 2001, MODERNITY E W LIT CR GINSBERG A, 2001, SPONTANEOUS MIND SEL Buttel FH, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P117, DOI 10.2307/2657292 Lawler EJ, 1999, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V25, P217, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.25.1.217 King Richard A, 1999, ORIENTALISM RELIGION THOMAS N., 1999, POSSESSIONS INDIGENO MORETTI F, 1999, ATLAS EUROPEAN NOVEL SNYDER G, 1999, G SNYDER READER PROS Strang D, 1998, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V24, P265, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.24.1.265 Lopez D., 1998, PRISONERS SHANGRI LA ALEXANDER JC, 1998, NEOFUNCTIONALISM SCHWARTZ S, 1998, W E CALIFORNIA MAKIN KINCHELOE JL, 1998, WHITE REIGN DEPLOYIN Bernstein M, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P531, DOI 10.1086/231250 Clemens Elisabeth S., 1997, PEOPLES LOBBY ORG IN Ziff Bruce H., 1997, BORROWED POWER ESSAY FARRELL JJ, 1997, SPIRIT 60 MAKING POS WESTGEEST H, 1997, ZEN 50 INTERACTION A Bourdieu P, 1996, RULES ART GENESIS ST KERN Robert, 1996, ORIENTALISM MODERNIS Surette Leon, 1996, LIT MODERNISM OCCULT PROTHERO S, 1996, WHITE BUDDHIST ASIAN KLEJMENT A, 1996, AM CATHOLIC PACIFISM GAMSON J, 1995, SOC PROBL, V42, P390, DOI 10.1525/sp.1995.42.3.03x0104z LOPEZ DS, 1995, CURATORS BUDDHA STUD SMITH RC, 1995, UTOPIA DISSENT ART P Bourdieu P., 1993, FIELD CULTURAL PRODU Gitlin T, 1993, 60 YEARS HOPE DAYS R CLEMENS ES, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P755, DOI 10.1086/230089 Benford Robert, 1992, FRONTIERS SOCIAL MOV, P133 Finke Roger, 1992, CHURCHING AM 1776 19 SCHUMACHER M, 1992, DHARMA LION BIOGRAPH SMALL M, 1992, GIVE PEACE CHANCE EX McNeal Patricia, 1992, HARDER WAR CATHOLIC TWEED THOMAS, 1992, AM ENCOUNTER BUDDHIS FRENCH WG, 1991, SAN FRANCISCO POETRY Devine JeremyM, 1995, AM ORDEAL ANTIWAR MO DAVIDSON M, 1989, SAN FRANCISCO RENAIS ORTNER SB, 1984, COMP STUD SOC HIST, V26, P126 ROBERTS NL, 1984, D DAY CATHOLIC WORKE Emerson R. M., 1981, SOCIAL PSYCHOL SOCIO, P30 Snyder Gary, 1980, REAL WORK INTERVIEWS BLY R, 1980, TALKING ALL MORNING Said E.W., 1979, ORIENTALISM Tilly C., 1978, MOBILIZATION REVOLUT Homans G, 1974, SOCIAL BEHAV ITS ELE TURNER RH, 1970, HUMAN NATURE COLLECT, P145 Blau P.M, 1964, EXCHANGE POWER SOCIA EMERSON RM, 1962, AM SOCIOL REV, V27, P31, DOI 10.2307/2089716 NR 74 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD AUG PY 2011 VL 76 IS 4 BP 620 EP 639 DI 10.1177/0003122411414820 PG 20 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 800HX UT WOS:000293351500006 ER PT J AU Johnson, EW Frickel, S AF Johnson, Erik W. Frickel, Scott TI Ecological Threat and the Founding of US National Environmental Movement Organizations, 1962-1998 SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE social movements; environmental movements; organizations; ecological threat; environmental degradation ID UNITED-STATES; SOCIAL-MOVEMENT; POLITICAL OPPORTUNITY; GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTALISM; RESOURCE MOBILIZATION; OBJECTIVE PROBLEMS; SUBJECTIVE VALUES; COLLECTIVE ACTION; PROTEST WAVES; LABOR UNIONS AB This study examines the role of "ecological threat" in shaping the U.S. environmental movement. Statistical analysis combines founding data on 772 national environmental movement organizations with ecological data on air pollution levels and amphibian and bird populations. We examine these data longitudinally, from 1962 through 1998. Net of other social, economic, and political factors suggested by social movement theory, we find evidence of segmented effects in the expected directions: Declines in wildlife populations are associated with the foundings of wildlife and wilderness protection organizations while increases in air pollution are associated with the foundings of organizations focused on ecosystem well-being and public health. These findings help refine long-held assumptions about the relationship between ecological degradation and environmental activism, and demonstrate the broader utility of the threat concept for strengthening theories of social movement mobilization. C1 [Johnson, Erik W.] Washington State Univ, Dept Sociol, Pullman, WA 99164 USA. RP Johnson, EW (reprint author), Washington State Univ, Dept Sociol, 211 Wilson Short Hall, Pullman, WA 99164 USA EM johnsone@wsu.edu CR Karapin R, 2011, MOBILIZATION, V16, P65 Walker ET, 2011, AM J SOCIOL, V116, P1284 Johnson EW, 2010, SOC FORCES, V88, P2267 Maher TV, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P252, DOI 10.1177/0003122410365305 Rosa EA, 2010, HUMAN FOOTPRINTS GLO BANASZAK LA, 2010, EXPLAINING MOVEMENT LOFT RE, 2009, AM Q, V61, P499 OLZAK S, 2009, SOC FORCES, V88, P210 Zahran S, 2008, URBAN AFF REV, V43, P447, DOI 10.1177/1078087407304688 Johnson EW, 2008, SOC FORCES, V86, P967 Sauer JR, 2008, N AM BREEDING BIRD S Epstein S., 2008, HDB SCI TECHNOLOGY S, P499 BAUMGARTNER FR, 2008, AM POL SCI ASS M BOS DUNLAP TR, 2008, DDT SILENT SPRING RI Brulle R, 2007, MOBILIZATION, V12, P255 Agnone J, 2007, SOC FORCES, V85, P1593, DOI 10.1353/sof.2007.0059 Almeida PD, 2007, LAT AM PERSPECT, V34, P123, DOI 10.1177/0094582X07300942 Armstrong EA, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P724 Martin AW, 2006, SOC SCI RES, V35, P771, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2005.06.004 Johnson E, 2006, RURAL SOCIOL, V71, P132, DOI 10.1526/003601106777789800 Cohen MJ, 2006, ORGAN ENVIRON, V19, P74, DOI 10.1177/1086026605285586 Hamilton L., 2006, STAT STATA CHATTERJEE S, 2006, REGRESSION EXAMPLE Soroka SN, 2005, BRIT J POLIT SCI, V35, P665, DOI 10.1017/S0007123405000347 Andrews KT, 2005, MOBILIZATION, V10, P213 *WRI, 2005, CLIM AN IND TOOL CAI MEYER DS, 2005, ROUTING OPPOSITION S, P1 Meyer DS, 2004, SOC FORCES, V82, P1457, DOI 10.1353/sof.2004.0082 Nownes AJ, 2004, BRIT J POLIT SCI, V34, P49, DOI 10.1017/S0007123403000346 Buechler Steven, 2004, BLACKWELL COMPANION, P47, DOI 10.1002/9780470999103.ch3 Almeida PD, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P345, DOI 10.1086/378395 Buttel FH, 2003, ORGAN ENVIRON, V16, P306, DOI 10.1177/1086026603256279 Earl J, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P581, DOI 10.2307/1519740 York R, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P279, DOI 10.2307/1519769 Gellert PK, 2003, INT SOC SCI J, V55, P15, DOI 10.1111/1468-2451.5501002 KELLSTEDT PM, 2003, MASS MEDIA DYNAMICS JENKINS CJ, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P277 EDWARDS B, 2003, MOBILIZATION, V8, P85 Van Dyke N, 2002, SOC PROBL, V49, P497, DOI 10.1525/sp.2002.49.4.497 Adler Jonathan H., 2002, FORDHAM ENV LJ, V14, P89 Wilkerson John D., 2002, POLICY DYNAMICS, P250 MERTIG AG, 2002, HDB ENV SOCIOLOGY, P448 Kempton W, 2001, RURAL SOCIOL, V66, P557 McCammon HJ, 2001, SOC FORCES, V80, P449, DOI 10.1353/sof.2001.0105 Olzak S, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P694, DOI 10.2307/3088954 Guber DL, 2001, SOC NATUR RESOUR, V14, P455, DOI 10.1080/08941920119043 Jacoby WG, 2001, J POLIT, V63, P544 Goldstone Jack A., 2001, SILENCE VOICE STUDY, P179 Hasenfeld Y., 1997, AFRICAN AM LEGISLATO McLaughlin P, 2000, RURAL SOCIOL, V65, P422 Houlahan JE, 2000, NATURE, V404, P752, DOI 10.1038/35008052 Frank DJ, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P96, DOI 10.2307/2657291 Brulle R. J., 2000, AGENCY DEMOCRACY NAT Carroll G., 2000, DEMOGRAPHY CORPORATI Smith Mark A., 2000, AM BUSINESS POLITICA EDWARDS GC, 2000, AM POLIT SCI REV, V92, P327 *EPA, 2000, 454R00002 EPA OFF AI Brechin SR, 1999, SOC SCI QUART, V80, P793 Jacobs D, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P157, DOI 10.1086/210270 Soule SA, 1999, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V22, P724 McVeigh R, 1999, SOC FORCES, V77, P1461, DOI 10.2307/3005883 Schlosberg D., 1999, ENV JUSTICE NEW PLUR Stimson James A., 1999, PUBLIC OPINION AM MO Aldrich Howard E., 1999, ORG EVOLVING Rothman F. D., 1999, MOBILIZATION, V4, P41 JENKINS CJ, 1999, PHILANTHROPIC FDN, P229 EDWARDS GC, 1999, POLARIZED POLITICS C, P109 FOSTER JB, 1999, VANISHING PLANET SHO Mittal V, 1998, ORGAN BEHAV HUM DEC, V76, P298, DOI 10.1006/obhd.1998.2808 Mark Jr. V.Barrow, 1998, PASSION BIRDS AM ORN Minkoff DC, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P779, DOI 10.2307/2657360 Dunlap RE, 1997, SOC SCI QUART, V78, P24 Brechin SR, 1997, SOC SCI QUART, V78, P16 Long S.J., 1997, REGRESSION MODELS CA Jasper James M., 1997, ART MORAL PROTEST CU Tan Joel, 1996, SEARCH ULTIMATE SINK Baum J. A. C, 1996, HDB ORG STUDIES, P77 Edwards B, 1995, AM SOCIOL REV, V60, P908, DOI 10.2307/2096432 BLAUSTEIN AR, 1995, SCI AM, V272, P52 INGLEHART R, 1995, PS, V28, P57, DOI 10.2307/420583 Abramson P.R., 1995, VALUE CHANGE GLOBAL Stebbins R. C, 1995, NATURAL HIST AMPHIBI Dowie M., 1995, LOSING GROUND AM ENV Minkoff Debra C., 1995, ORG EQUALITY EVOLUTI Szasz A., 1994, ECOPOPULISM TOXIC WA Liao T. F, 1994, INTERPRETING PROBABI Erikson K. T., 1994, NEW SPECIES TROUBLE Schnaiberg A., 1994, ENV SOC ENDURING CON Dalton Russell J., 1994, GREEN RAINBOW ENV GR MARKHAM A, 1994, BRIEF HIST POLLUTION Martell Luke, 1994, ECOLOGY SOC KOOPMANS R, 1993, AM SOCIOL REV, V58, P637, DOI 10.2307/2096279 MEYER DS, 1993, SOCIOL FORUM, V8, P157, DOI 10.1007/BF01115488 KHAWAJA M, 1993, SOCIOL FORUM, V8, P47, DOI 10.1007/BF01112330 Baumgartner Frank R., 1993, AGENDAS INSTABILITY Bullard R. D., 1993, CONFRONTING ENV RACI Gottlieb R., 1993, FORCING SPRING TRANS KRIESI H, 1992, EUR J POLIT RES, V22, P219, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-6765.1992.tb00312.x Olzak S, 1992, DYNAMICS ETHNIC COMP Dunlap Riley, 1992, AM ENV US ENV MOVEME, P1 Mitchell Robert Cameron, 1992, AM ENV US ENV MOVEME, P11 Inglehart R, 1990, CULTURE SHIFT ADV IN Brown P., 1990, NO SAFE PLACE TOXIC MEYER DS, 1990, WINTER DISCONTENT Hannani M., 1989, ORG ECOLOGY CARROLL GR, 1988, ECOLOGICAL MODELS OR PETULLA JM, 1988, AM ENV HIST KLANDERMANS B, 1987, AM SOCIOL REV, V52, P519, DOI 10.2307/2095297 DUTTON JE, 1987, ACAD MANAGE REV, V12, P76, DOI 10.2307/257995 Hays S.P., 1987, BEAUTY HLTH PERMANEN HANNAN MT, 1987, AM J SOCIOL, V92, P910, DOI 10.1086/228587 BUTTEL FH, 1987, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V13, P465, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.13.1.465 ROSS J, 1986, ADMIN SCI QUART, V31, P274, DOI 10.2307/2392791 KAHNEMAN D, 1984, AM PSYCHOL, V39, P341, DOI 10.1037/0003-066X.39.4.341 HANNAN MT, 1984, AM SOCIOL REV, V49, P149, DOI 10.2307/2095567 WALSH EJ, 1983, AM SOCIOL REV, V48, P764, DOI 10.2307/2095324 DELACROIX J, 1983, ADMIN SCI QUART, V28, P274, DOI 10.2307/2392621 McAdam Douglas, 1982, POLITICAL PROCESS DE Levine Adeline, 1982, LOVE CANAL SCI POLIT Melosi Martin V., 1980, POLLUTION REFORM AM DUNLAP RE, 1979, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V5, P243, DOI 10.1146/annurev.so.05.080179.001331 Tilly C., 1978, MOBILIZATION REVOLUT CATTON WR, 1978, AM SOCIOL, V13, P41 MCCARTHY JD, 1977, AM J SOCIOL, V82, P1212, DOI 10.1086/226464 Inglehart R, 1977, SILENT REVOLUTION CH DUNLAP RE, 1976, WESTERN POLIT QUART, V29, P384, DOI 10.2307/447511 MARX GT, 1975, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V1, P363, DOI 10.1146/annurev.so.01.080175.002051 Oberschall A., 1973, SOCIAL CONFLICT SOCI ZALD Mayer N, 1973, TREND SOCIAL MOVEMEN MOLOTCH H, 1970, SOCIOL INQ, V40, P131, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.1970.tb00990.x Nash Roderick, 1967, WILDERNESS AM MIND ZALD MN, 1966, SOC FORCES, V44, P327, DOI 10.2307/2575833 Carson R., 1962, SILENT SPRING *GAL RES INC, 1956, ENC ASS, V1 ROPER DL, PARTY CONTROL US GOV NR 135 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD AUG PY 2011 VL 58 IS 3 BP 305 EP 329 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.3.305 PG 25 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 804SE UT WOS:000293673500001 ER PT J AU Stretesky, PB Huss, S Lynch, MJ Zahran, S Childs, B AF Stretesky, Paul B. Huss, Sheila Lynch, Michael J. Zahran, Sammy Childs, Bob TI The Founding of Environmental Justice Organizations Across US Counties during the 1990s and 2000s: Civil Rights and Environmental Cross-Movement Effects SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE organizational ecology; organization formation; social movements; density dependence; environmental movements ID SOCIAL-MOVEMENT; POPULATION ECOLOGY; NONPROFIT SECTOR; GROWTH; DYNAMICS; LEGITIMACY; INDUSTRIES; RESOURCES; EVOLUTION; PATTERNS AB This research expands upon organizational ecology theory to examine variations in founding of organizations in the formalized sector of the environmental justice movement across U.S. counties for two time periods (1990-1999 and 2000-2008). Cross-movement effects are examined to determine if founding is more or less likely to occur in counties where related civil rights and environmental organizations are located. Consistent with the notion of agglomeration effects, we hypothesize that during the 1990s the relationship among civil rights density, environmental density, and environmental justice founding is positive and suggests cooperative efforts. That is, environmental justice organizations should form in counties where civil rights organizations and environmental organizations exist. Because the focus of environmental justice organizations may have expanded over time and created a more competitive atmosphere, cross-movement relationships that were positive across counties during the 1990s are hypothesized to turn negative across counties during the 2000s. Multivariate analysis suggests mixed support for these hypotheses. Specifically, civil rights density is positively associated with environmental justice founding during the 1990s and negatively associated with environmental justice founding during the 20005 suggesting potential cooperative and then competitive effects across counties over time. However, the correlations between environmental density and environmental justice founding, while positive and statistically significant during the 1990s, are not statistically significant during the 2000s. Thus, in the case of organizations in the formalized sector of the environmental and environmental justice movements it appears that there is a trend toward competitive effects even as those effects have yet to materialize. C1 [Stretesky, Paul B.] Univ Colorado, Sch Publ Affairs, Denver, CO 80217 USA. [Lynch, Michael J.] Univ S Florida, Tampa, FL 33620 USA. [Zahran, Sammy; Childs, Bob] Colorado State Univ, Ft Collins, CO 80523 USA. RP Stretesky, PB (reprint author), Univ Colorado, Sch Publ Affairs, Denver, CO 80217 USA EM paul.stretesky@ucdenver.edu CR Nownes AJ, 2010, SOC SCI QUART, V91, P689 Walker ET, 2010, SOC PROBL, V57, P315, DOI 10.1525/sp.2010.57.3.315 Kovacs B, 2010, COMPUT MATH ORGAN TH, V16, P29, DOI 10.1007/s10588-010-9064-4 Wollebaek D, 2009, ACTA SOCIOL, V52, P365, DOI 10.1177/0001699309348708 Bell Michael M., 2009, INVITATION ENV SOCIO *ACT CAUS, 2009, ACT CAUS SOC GIV NET *ASS UNL, 2009, ENC ASS ONL *GUID, 2009, GUID NONPR DAT Schneiberg M, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P635 Soule SA, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P1568, DOI 10.1086/587152 Luksetich William, 2008, NONPROFIT VOLUNTARY, V37, P434 Burns R. G., 2008, ENV LAW CRIME JUSTIC *IRS, 2008, SO1 TAX STAT EX ORG *US EPA, 2008, TRI 1990 PUBL DAT RE *NCCS, 2008, 1990 COR FIL *ASS REL DAT ARCH, 2008, 1990 REL CONGR MEMB Brulle R, 2007, MOBILIZATION, V12, P255 Haveman HA, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P117 Downey L, 2007, URBAN STUD, V44, P953, DOI 10.1080/00420980701256013 POPIELARZ P, 2007, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V34, P65 BRYANT B, 2007, POWER JUSTICE ENV CR, P205 STEPANNORRIS J, 2007, SOC SCI HIST, V31, P343, DOI 10.1215/01455532-2007-002 Della Porta D., 2006, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS INT Saha R, 2005, SOC PROBL, V52, P618, DOI 10.1525/sp.2005.52.4.618 Finke R, 2005, REV RELIG RES, V47, P5, DOI 10.2307/4148278 Andrews KT, 2005, MOBILIZATION, V10, P213 Saxton GD, 2005, SOC SCI QUART, V86, P16, DOI 10.1111/j.0038-4941.2005.00288.x Ringquist EJ, 2005, J POLICY ANAL MANAG, V24, P223, DOI 10.1002/pam.20088 Davis G.F., 2005, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS ORG Pellow DN, 2005, POWER JUSTICE ENV CR Benford Robert D, 2005, POWER JUSTICE ENV CR, P37 McAdam D., 2005, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS ORG, P4, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511791000.003 BRULLE RJ, 2005, POWER JUSTICE ENV CR, P205 FITZGERALD S, 2005, SOC FORCES, V84, P1016 Checker M, 2004, IDENTITIES-GLOB STUD, V11, P171, DOI 10.1080/10702890490451947 Sternberg R, 2004, EUR PLAN STUD, V12, P767, DOI 10.1080/0965431042000251855 US Department of Commerce, 2004, CENS POP HOUS 2000 U MATSUNAGA Y, 2004, ANN PUBLIC COOPERATI, V75, P227, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8292.2004.00251.x WISSEN L, 2004, SMALL BUSINESS EC, V22, P253 ANDERSEN M, 2004, SOCIOLOGY UNDERSTAND Brown RK, 2003, SOC FORCES, V82, P617, DOI 10.1353/sof.2004.0005 Anselin L, 2003, GEODA 0 9 USERS GUID MCCARTHY J, 2003, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS REA, P170 KLANDERMANS B, 2002, METHODS SOCIAL MOVEM, P3 HORTON D, 2002, NONPROFIT VOLUNTARY, V43, P93 Gronbjerg KA, 2001, NONPROF VOLUNT SEC Q, V30, P684, DOI 10.1177/0899764001304004 King G., 2001, POLIT ANAL, V9, P137 Cole Luke W., 2001, GROUND ENV RACISM RI Liu F, 2001, ENV JUSTICE ANAL THE FABER DR, 2001, GREEN ANOTHER COLOR Bullard RD, 2000, J SOC ISSUES, V56, P555, DOI 10.1111/0022-4537.00184 McGurty EM, 2000, SOC NATUR RESOUR, V13, P373, DOI 10.1080/089419200279027 Brulle R. J., 2000, AGENCY DEMOCRACY NAT Taylor DE, 2000, AM BEHAV SCI, V43, P508, DOI 10.1177/00027640021955432 Carroll G., 2000, DEMOGRAPHY CORPORATI VIG NJ, 2000, ENV POLICY NEW DIREC, P1 BULLARD R, 2000, PEOPLE COLOR ENV GRO RIOS J, 2000, POLICY STUDIES REV, V17, P179 Corbin JJ, 1999, NONPROF VOLUNT SEC Q, V28, P296, DOI 10.1177/0899764099283004 Schock K, 1999, SOC PROBL, V46, P355, DOI 10.1525/sp.1999.46.3.03x0250p Bullard R, 1999, LOCAL ENV, V4, P5, DOI 10.1080/13549839908725577 Stretesky P, 1998, SOC PROBL, V45, P268, DOI 10.1525/sp.1998.45.2.03x0169m Salamon L., 1998, VOLUNTAS, V9, P213, DOI 10.1023/A:1022058200985 Arp W, 1997, J BLACK STUD, V28, P255 Minkoff DC, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P779, DOI 10.2307/2657360 Barnett WP, 1997, ADMIN SCI QUART, V42, P128, DOI 10.2307/2393811 Clemens Elisabeth S., 1997, PEOPLES LOBBY ORG IN Pichardo NA, 1997, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V23, P411, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.411 McAdam D., 1996, COMP PERSPECTIVES SO Lofland J, 1996, SOCIAL MOVEMENT ORG CABLE S, 1995, SOCIOL SPECTRUM, V15, P419 HANNAN MT, 1995, AM SOCIOL REV, V60, P509, DOI 10.2307/2096291 SHEFNER J, 1995, THEOR SOC, V24, P595, DOI 10.1007/BF00993524 WIKLE TA, 1995, PROF GEOGR, V47, P41, DOI 10.1111/j.0033-0124.1995.00041.x BARNETT WP, 1995, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V21, P217, DOI 10.1146/annurev.so.21.080195.001245 EDWARDS B, 1995, ECOLOGICAL RESISTANC, P35 *ENV INF LTD, 1995, ENV SERV DIR, V1 Minkoff Debra C., 1995, ORG EQUALITY EVOLUTI BARRON DN, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V100, P381, DOI 10.1086/230541 BULLARD R, 1994, PEOPLE COLOR ENV GRO MINKOFF D, 1994, SOC FORCES, V4, P943 ZALD M, 1994, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS ORG, P15 CHAVIS B, 1993, CONFRONTING ENV RACI, P3 BULLARD RD, 1993, CONFRONTING ENV RACI, P15 DIANI M, 1992, SOCIOL REV, V40, P1, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-954X.1992.tb02943.x Gamson W. A, 1992, TALKING POLITICS Hannan M. T., 1992, DYNAMICS ORG POPULAT JORDAN C, 1992, VOICES ENV MOVEMENT, P71 *US BUR CENS, 1992, CENS POP HOUS 1990 U Fox J, 1991, REGRESSION DIAGNOSTI Bullard RD, 1990, DUMPING DIXIE RACE C SINGH JV, 1990, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V16, P161, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.16.1.161 *NAT WILDL FED, 1990, CONS DIR *ASS UNL, 1990, ENC ASS CARROLL GR, 1989, AM SOCIOL REV, V54, P524, DOI 10.2307/2095875 ZUCKER LG, 1989, AM SOCIOL REV, V54, P542, DOI 10.2307/2095876 MCCARTHY JD, 1988, ECOLOGICAL MODELS OR, P71 CARROLL GR, 1985, AM J SOCIOL, V90, P1262, DOI 10.1086/228210 DIMAGGIO PJ, 1983, AM SOCIOL REV, V48, P147, DOI 10.2307/2095101 Jenkins Craig, 1983, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V9, P527 McAdam Douglas, 1982, POLITICAL PROCESS DE HANNAN MT, 1977, AM J SOCIOL, V82, P929, DOI 10.1086/226424 LINCOLN JR, 1977, SOC SCI QUART, V58, P472 Gusfield J., 1970, PROTEST REFORM REVOL ZALD MN, 1966, SOC FORCES, V44, P327, DOI 10.2307/2575833 Kornhauser W., 1959, POLITICS MASS SOC *US EPA, SUP SIT INF NR 107 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD AUG PY 2011 VL 58 IS 3 BP 330 EP 360 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.3.330 PG 31 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 804SE UT WOS:000293673500002 ER PT J AU Brown-Saracino, J AF Brown-Saracino, Japonica TI From the Lesbian Ghetto to Ambient Community: The Perceived Costs and Benefits of Integration for Community SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE community; queer; lesbian; integration; social ties ID TIES; CITY; GEOGRAPHIES; NETWORKS; QUESTION; URBANISM; VALLEY; SPACE; GAY AB Drawing on an ethnography of queer women in Ithaca, New York, this article documents the perceived costs and benefits for a minority group's ties of changing attitudes, identities, and legislation. It reveals that despite the high proportion of queer women in Ithaca most informants report disappointment with "community." However, this disappointment does not correlate with a dearth of affective local ties; queer women detail a wealth of supportive ties to heterosexual and queer neighbors. Informants' simultaneous disappointment with "community" and rich local ties emerge from: (1) a shift from identity politics and networks to emphasis on shared cultural, social, and political tastes and activities; (2) the breadth of the queer female population; and (3) queer women's successful integration into Ithaca's social, cultural, and political spheres. From informants' perspectives these conditions weaken "real" community, which they associate with homogenous place-based networks of marginalized individuals, and promote a strong sense of ambient community: feelings of belonging and connection that arise from informal, voluntary, and affective ties largely fashioned around shared tastes and activities and predicated on a sense of safety and acceptance forged among heterogeneous proximate individuals. Contra the prevailing expectation that place-based ties best flourish among marginalized individuals who share a dominant identity and formal institutions, the article demonstrates that when social and cultural conditions change local ties change, too they do not simply disappear. Social and cultural shifts alter the foundation of local ties and informants' assessment thereof C1 Boston Univ, Dept Sociol, Boston, MA 02215 USA. RP Brown-Saracino, J (reprint author), Boston Univ, Dept Sociol, 96-100 Cummington Ave, Boston, MA 02215 USA EM japonica@bu.edu CR Ghaziani A, 2011, SOC PROBL, V58, P99, DOI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.1.99 ANDERSON E, 2011, COSMOPOLITAN CANOPY Hunter MA, 2010, CITY COMMUNITY, V9, P165, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-6040.2010.01320.x U. S. Census Bureau, 2010, AM COMM SURV 2005 20 U.S. Census Bureau, 2010, US CENS 2010 MACGREGOR LC, 2010, HABITS HEARTLAND SMA Jerolmack C, 2009, ETHNOGRAPHY, V10, P435, DOI 10.1177/1466138109346997 Gray M, 2009, OUT COUNTRY YOUTH ME Brown-Saracino J., 2009, NEIGHBORHOOD NEVER C Trappeniers L, 2008, BELL LABS TECH J, V13, P5, DOI 10.1002/bltj.20296 Ghaziani Amin, 2008, DIVIDENDS DISSENT CO BROWNSARACINO J, 2008, NEWSLETTER COMMU NOV, P1 BROWNSARACINO J, 2008, NEWSLETTER COMMU NOV, P4 Brown-Saracino J, 2007, THEOR SOC, V36, P437, DOI 10.1007/s11186-007-9041-1 Millward L, 2007, GENDER PLACE CULT, V14, P427, DOI 10.1080/09663690701439736 Cooke TJ, 2007, PROF GEOGR, V59, P285, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9272.2007.00613.x Bell D, 2007, PROG HUM GEOG, V31, P7, DOI 10.1177/0309132507073526 2007, ADVOCATE 0327, P27 Podmore JA, 2006, SOC CULT GEOGR, V7, P595, DOI 10.1080/14649360600825737 Borer M. I., 2006, CITY COMMUNITY, V5, P173, DOI DOI 10.1111/J.1540-6040.2006.00168.X Guest A. M., 2006, CITY COMMUNITY, V5, P363 RYLE RR, 2006, CITY COMMUNITY, V5, P53, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-6040.2006.00155.x Smith DP, 2005, J RURAL STUD, V21, P313, DOI 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2005.04.002 Anderson E, 2004, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V595, P14, DOI 10.1177/0002716204266833 Gates G. J., 2004, GAY LESBIAN ATLAS KNOPP L, 2004, GENDER PLACE CULT, V11, P121, DOI DOI 10.1080/0966369042000188585 BROWNSARACINO J, 2004, CITY COMMUNITY, V3, P135, DOI 10.1111/j.1535-6841.2004.00073.x Knopp L, 2003, ENVIRON PLANN D, V21, P409, DOI 10.1068/d360 Brekhus Wayne, 2003, PEACOCKS CHAMELEONS Hampton K., 2003, CITY COMMUNITY, V2, P277, DOI 10.1046/j.1535-6841.2003.00057.x White K. J. C., 2003, CITY COMMUNITY, V2, P239, DOI 10.1111/1540-6040.00053 Monti D. J., 2003, CITY COMMUNITY, V2, P143 Katz J., 2002, SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES Driskell R.B., 2002, CITY COMMUNITY, V1, P373, DOI 10.1111/1540-6040.00031 Seidman S, 2002, CLOSET TRANSFORMATIO Taylor Monique, 2002, HARLEM HEAVEN HELL Pritchard A., 2002, Leisure Studies, V21, P105, DOI 10.1080/02614360110121551 Brint S, 2001, SOCIOL THEOR, V19, P1, DOI 10.1111/0735-2751.00125 Jackson John L., 2001, HARLEMWORLD DOING RA Rotolo T, 2000, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V43, P271 Guest AM, 2000, URBAN AFF REV, V35, P603, DOI 10.1177/10780870022184561 Black D, 2000, DEMOGRAPHY, V37, P139, DOI 10.2307/2648117 United States Census Bureau, 2000, US CENS 2000 VALENTINE G, 2000, NOWHERE EVERYWHERE L Binnie J, 1999, PROG HUM GEOG, V23, P175, DOI 10.1177/030913259902300202 Wellman B, 1999, NETWORKS GLOBAL VILL WEBBER M, 1999, AM CITIES TECHNOLOGY, P201 TAYLOR V, 1999, WAVES PROTEST SOCIAL, P169 Calhoun C, 1998, SOCIOL INQ, V68, P373, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.1998.tb00474.x Lofland L., 1998, PUBLIC REALM EXPLORI DILEONARDO M, 1998, EXOTICS HOME ANTHR O Forsyth A, 1997, INT J URBAN REGIONAL, V21, P38, DOI 10.1111/1468-2427.00057 Esterberg K. G., 1997, LESBIAN BISEXUAL IDE Durkheim E., 1997, SUICIDE GRAY ER, 1997, CONT AM RELIG ETHNOG, P79 Stein A., 1997, SEX SENSIBILITY STOR CHASKIN RJ, 1997, SOCIAL SERVICE R DEC, P521 Green Sarah F., 1997, URBAN AMAZONS LESBIA Finke R, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P203, DOI 10.2307/2096331 LOGAN JR, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V100, P453, DOI 10.1086/230543 Kennedy Elizabeth Lapovsky, 1993, BOOTS LEATHER SLIPPE Rheingold H., 1993, VIRTUAL COMMUNITY FI GRISWOLD W, 1992, AM SOCIOL REV, V57, P709, DOI 10.2307/2096118 RABINOWITZ J, 1992, J SCI STUD RELIG, V31, P339, DOI 10.2307/1387124 WELLMAN B, 1990, AM J SOCIOL, V96, P558, DOI 10.1086/229572 Anderson E., 1990, STREETWISE RACE CLAS Hummon D., 1990, COMMONPLACES COMMUNI Oldenburg R, 1989, GREAT GOOD PLACE CAF SAMPSON RJ, 1988, AM SOCIOL REV, V53, P766, DOI 10.2307/2095822 Wellman B, 1988, POWER COMMUNITY CITY, P81 MCKNIGHT JL, 1987, SOC POLICY, V17, P54 ROSENTHAL CJ, 1987, AGING CANADA SOCIAL, P311 LOCKARD D, 1985, J HOMOSEXUAL, V11, P83 Wellman B., 1985, UNDERSTANDING PERSON, P159 Castells M., 1983, CITY GRASSROOTS KRIEGER SL, 1983, MIRROR DANCE IDENTIT Fischer C, 1982, DWELL FRIENDS PERSON WELLMAN B, 1979, AM J SOCIOL, V84, P1201, DOI 10.1086/226906 WELLMAN B, 1979, URBAN AFF REV, V14, P363, DOI 10.1177/107808747901400305 Wolf Deborah Goleman, 1979, LESBIAN COMMUNITY Weber M., 1978, EC SOC Weber Max, 1978, EC SOC, V1 ETTORRE EM, 1978, INT J URBAN REGIONAL, V2, P499 KORNBLUM W, 1976, BLUE COLLAR COMMUNIT FISCHER CS, 1975, AM J SOCIOL, V80, P1319, DOI 10.1086/225993 HUNTER A, 1975, AM SOCIOL REV, V40, P537, DOI 10.2307/2094194 BARNHART E, 1975, OLD FAMILY NEW FAMIL, P90 GRANOVET.MS, 1973, AM J SOCIOL, V78, P1360, DOI 10.1086/225469 Fischer Claude S., 1972, SOCIOLOGICAL METHODS, V1, P187, DOI 10.1177/004912417200100203 HUNTER A, 1972, SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION, P44 Simmel G, 1904, G SIMMEL INDIVIDUALI HANDLIN O, 1969, BOSTONS IMMIGRANTS Suttles Gerald, 1968, SOCIAL ORDER SLUM ET Gans Herbert, 1967, LEVITTOWNERS BRETON R, 1964, AM J SOCIOL, V70, P193, DOI 10.1086/223793 Tonnies F., 1963, COMMUNITY SOC Warren R. L., 1963, COMMUNITY AM Gans HerbertJ, 1962, URBAN VILLAGERS HANDLIN O, 1959, UPROOTED Janowitz M., 1952, COMMUNITY PRESS URBA WHYTE WF, 1943, STREET CORNER SOC ST Wirth L, 1938, AM J SOCIOL, V44, P1, DOI 10.1086/217913 Burgess Ernest, 1925, CITY SUGGESTIONS STU Cooley CH, 1909, SOCIAL ORG STUDY LAR ANDERSON B, IMAGINED COMMUNITIES NR 105 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD AUG PY 2011 VL 58 IS 3 BP 361 EP 388 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.3.361 PG 28 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 804SE UT WOS:000293673500003 ER PT J AU Lauster, N Easterbrook, A AF Lauster, Nathanael Easterbrook, Adam TI No Room for New Families? A Field Experiment Measuring Rental Discrimination against Same-Sex Couples and Single Parents SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE housing discrimination; family; single parent; sexuality; audit study ID HOUSING DISCRIMINATION; DETECTING DISCRIMINATION; MARRIAGE; GAY; ATTITUDES; MARKET; CUSTOMERS; LESBIANS; AMERICA; MOTHERS AB We suggest that new forms of family households, especially same-sex couples and single parents, are likely to face discrimination in their interactions with rental markets. Following the contact hypothesis, we hypothesize that the geographic distribution of discrimination is likely to vary Specifically, in places with more new family households we are likely to find less discrimination against these households. We investigate these issues in the metropolitan area of Vancouver, Canada, through analysis of 1,669 inquiries made about one- and two-bedroom apartments. Using afield experimental design similar to audit studies, we analyze landlord responses to five different two-person household scenarios, including one heterosexual couple, two same-sex couples, and two single parents. Evidence suggests that male same-sex couples, single mothers, and single fathers all face significant discrimination relative to heterosexual couples. The contact hypothesis was supported for male same-sex couples, but not for single parents. This could indicate that single parents are facing discrimination primarily based upon their economic marginalization rather than other forms of prejudice. C1 [Lauster, Nathanael] Univ British Columbia, Dept Sociol, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z9, Canada. RP Lauster, N (reprint author), Univ British Columbia, Dept Sociol, 6303 NW Marine Dr, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z9, Canada EM nlauster@mail.ubc.ca CR *BC RES TEN BRANCH, 2011, LANDL TEN FACT SHEET Ahmed AM, 2010, LAND ECON, V86, P79 Bosch M, 2010, REG SCI URBAN ECON, V40, P11, DOI 10.1016/j.regsciurbeco.2009.11.001 *CMHC, 2010, CAN HOUS OBS 2010 *STAT CAN, 2010, CENS CAN 2006 PUBL U HAWKINS K, 2010, HUFFINGTON POST 0301 LAUER SR, 2010, J FAMILY THEORY REV, V2, P58 *CMHC, 2010, RENT MARK REP FALL 2 *STAT, 2010, STAT DOC MAN RAZZI E, 2010, WASHINGTON POST 0318 Ahmed AM, 2009, ECONOMICA, V76, P588, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0335.2008.00692.x Herek GM, 2009, J INTERPERS VIOLENCE, V24, P54, DOI 10.1177/0886260508316477 2009, CBC NEWS 0819 *CMHC, 2009, RENT MARK REP CAN HI Ley D, 2008, URBAN STUD, V45, P2471, DOI 10.1177/0042098008097103 Ahmed AM, 2008, J URBAN ECON, V64, P362, DOI 10.1016/j.jue.2008.02.004 Ahmed AM, 2008, J HOUS ECON, V17, P234, DOI 10.1016/j.jhe.2008.06.003 Pager D, 2008, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V34, P181, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.33.040406.131740 Fuller S., 2008, CITIZENSHIP STUD, V12, P157, DOI [10.1080/13621020801900119, DOI 10.1080/13621020801900119] ROSCIGNO V, 2008, SOC PROBL, V56, P49 Milan A., 2007, FAMILY PORTRAIT CONT *MICH FAIR HOUS CT, 2007, SEX OR HOUS DISCR MI *STAT CAN, 2007, 2006 CENS FAM PORTR Kitzinger C, 2005, SOC PROBL, V52, P477, DOI 10.1525/sp.2005.52.4.477 Gross N, 2005, SOCIOL THEOR, V23, P286, DOI 10.1111/j.0735-2751.2005.00255.x Ross SL, 2005, SOC PROBL, V52, P152, DOI 10.1525/sp.2005.52.2.152 Choi SJ, 2005, J HOUS ECON, V14, P1, DOI 10.1016/j.jhe.2005.02.001 *CMHC, 2005, IND LANDL SURV FIN R Cherlin AJ, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P848, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00058.x Coontz S, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P974, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00067.x Le Bourdais C, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P929, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00063.x Kiernan K, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P980, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00068.x Fischer M., 2004, CITY COMMUNITY, V3, P221, DOI 10.1111/j.1535-6841.2004.00079.x Ondrich J, 2003, REV ECON STAT, V85, P854, DOI 10.1162/003465303772815772 Jacobs K, 2003, HOUSING STUD, V18, P429, DOI 10.1080/0267303032000117861 CLAMPETLUNDQUIS.S, 2003, J SOCIOLOGY SOCIAL W, V30, P123 Pader E, 2002, J ARCHIT PLAN RES, V19, P300 Low-Beer S, 2002, AIDS CARE, V14, P111, DOI 10.1080/09540120220097982 Turner Margery, 2002, DISCRIMINATION METRO NOVAC S, 2002, HOUSING DISCRIMINATI Loftus J, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P762, DOI 10.2307/3088957 MASSEY DS, 2001, URBAN AFF REV, V36, P470 POMEROY S, 2001, CMHC SOCIOECONOMIC S, V93 Bock JD, 2000, GENDER SOC, V14, P62, DOI 10.1177/089124300014001005 Heckman JJ, 1998, J ECON PERSPECT, V12, P101 Tilly C, 1998, DURABLE INEQUALITY Yinger J, 1998, HOUS POLICY DEBATE, V9, P893 Page S, 1998, J HOMOSEXUAL, V36, P31, DOI 10.1300/J082v36n02_03 Kite ME, 1996, PERS SOC PSYCHOL B, V22, P336, DOI 10.1177/0146167296224002 Herek GM, 1996, PERS SOC PSYCHOL B, V22, P412, DOI 10.1177/0146167296224007 Ley D., 1996, NEW MIDDLE CLASS REM MORALES J, 1996, LA RAZA LAW J, V9, P103 Lesthaeghe Ron J., 1995, GENDER FAMILY CHANGE, P17 ALLEN E, 1995, ADM LAW J AM U, V9, P297 DOWD NE, 1995, HARV WOMENS LJ, V18, P19 LITTLE MH, 1994, CAN J SOCIOL, V19, P233, DOI 10.2307/3341346 NOVAC S, 1994, THESIS U TORONTO TOR GALSTER G, 1991, REV SOC ECON, V49, P76 Goldscheider Frances K., 1991, NEW FAMILIES NO FAMI KNOPP L, 1990, POLIT GEOGR QUART, V9, P337, DOI 10.1016/0260-9827(90)90033-7 STACEY J., 1990, BRAVE NEW FAMILIES S PHELPS ES, 1972, AM ECON REV, V62, P659 Allport G. W., 1954, NATURE PREJUDICE NR 63 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD AUG PY 2011 VL 58 IS 3 BP 389 EP 409 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.3.389 PG 21 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 804SE UT WOS:000293673500004 ER PT J AU Hipp, JR AF Hipp, John R. TI Violent Crime, Mobility Decisions, and Neighborhood Racial/Ethnic Transition SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE violent crime; residential mobility; race/ethnicity; racial transition; neighborhood change ID NEW-YORK-CITY; RESIDENTIAL-MOBILITY; ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION; SPATIAL ASSIMILATION; HOUSING TURNOVER; SEGREGATION; RATES; BLACK; RACE; MIGRATION AB Numerous studies have observed a positive cross-sectional relationship between the size of racial/ethnic minority groups and crime and posited that this relationship is entirely due to a causal effect of minorities on crime rates. We posit that at least some of this relationship might be due to the opposite effect: neighborhood crime increases the number of racial/ethnic minorities. This study employs a sample that allows nesting housing units within census tracts in a number of cities to test the effect of violent crime rates on residential mobility. We find that racial/ethnic transformation occurs due to two effects: first, white households are more likely to exit neighborhoods with higher rates of violent crime than are African American households. Second, whites are significantly less likely to move into a housing unit in a tract with more violent crime, particularly if this violent crime rate is increasing. On the other hand, African American and Latino households are more likely to enter neighborhoods with higher levels of violent crime. And Latinos are particularly likely to enter neighborhoods experiencing an increasing level of violent crime over the previous four years. C1 Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Criminol Law & Soc, Irvine, CA 92697 USA. RP Hipp, JR (reprint author), Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Criminol Law & Soc, 3311 Social Ecol 2, Irvine, CA 92697 USA EM john.hipp@UCI.edu CR Hipp JR, 2010, CRIMINOLOGY, V48, P683 Xie M, 2010, CRIMINOLOGY, V48, P865 Hipp JR, 2010, SOC PROBL, V57, P205, DOI 10.1525/sp.2010.57.2.205 Hipp JR, 2009, SOC FORCES, V87, P1777 Xie M, 2008, CRIMINOLOGY, V46, P809, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2008.00133.x Hipp JR, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P659 Hipp JR, 2007, CRIMINOLOGY, V45, P665, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2007.00088.x Tita GE, 2006, J QUANT CRIMINOL, V22, P299, DOI 10.1007/s10940-006-9013-z *PIT FDN, 2006, COMM FACTS *MO CENS DAT CTR, 2006, MABLE GEOCORR90 GEOG *CANDO, 2006, NEO CANDO *POL CTR, 2006, SAVI Rosenbaum E, 2005, J URBAN AFF, V27, P261, DOI 10.1111/j.0735-2166.2005.00236.x ALLISON PD, 2005, SUGI 30 P, P1 Fischer CS, 2004, DEMOGRAPHY, V41, P37, DOI 10.1353/dem.2004.0002 Fischer M., 2004, CITY COMMUNITY, V3, P221, DOI 10.1111/j.1535-6841.2004.00079.x SCHWARTZ AE, 2003, J HOUSING RES, V14, P1 Baumer EP, 2002, CRIMINOLOGY, V40, P579, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2002.tb00967.x Mosher C. J., 2002, MISMEASURE CRIME MacDonald Z, 2001, BRIT J CRIMINOL, V41, P127, DOI 10.1093/bjc/41.1.127 Crowder KD, 2001, SOC FORCES, V79, P1377, DOI 10.1353/sof.2001.0035 McNulty TL, 2001, CRIMINOLOGY, V39, P467, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2001.tb00930.x Alba RD, 2000, SOC FORCES, V79, P587, DOI 10.2307/2675510 Myers SM, 2000, SOC FORCES, V79, P755, DOI 10.2307/2675516 Ouimet M, 2000, CAN J CRIMINOL, V42, P135 South SJ, 2000, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V26, P83, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.26.1.83 TURNER MA, 2000, DISCRIMINATION METRO Dugan L, 1999, CRIMINOLOGY, V37, P903, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.1999.tb00509.x Myers SM, 1999, J MARRIAGE FAM, V61, P871, DOI 10.2307/354009 Cullen JB, 1999, REV ECON STAT, V81, P159, DOI 10.1162/003465399558030 Agnew R, 1999, J RES CRIME DELINQ, V36, P123, DOI 10.1177/0022427899036002001 Baumer E, 1998, J RES CRIME DELINQ, V35, P316, DOI 10.1177/0022427898035003004 Grannis R, 1998, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P1530, DOI 10.1086/231400 South SJ, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P17, DOI 10.2307/2657474 Liska AE, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P27, DOI 10.2307/2657475 MIETHE TD, 1998, TESTING THEORIES CRI South SJ, 1997, DEMOGRAPHY, V34, P525, DOI 10.2307/3038307 Morenoff JD, 1997, SOC FORCES, V76, P31, DOI 10.2307/2580317 DeFronzo J, 1997, J RES CRIME DELINQ, V34, P395, DOI 10.1177/0022427897034003005 Stolzenberg RM, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P494, DOI 10.2307/2657318 Chamlin MB, 1997, CRIMINOLOGY, V35, P203, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.1997.tb00875.x Schafer J. L., 1997, ANAL INCOMPLETE MULT South SJ, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P1040, DOI 10.1086/231039 Zimring Franklin E., 1997, CRIME IS NOT PROBLEM Krivo LJ, 1996, SOC FORCES, V75, P619, DOI 10.2307/2580416 Logan JR, 1996, SOC FORCES, V74, P851, DOI 10.2307/2580384 Frey WH, 1996, DEMOGRAPHY, V33, P35, DOI 10.2307/2061712 LISKA AE, 1995, AM J SOCIOL, V101, P578, DOI 10.1086/230754 MASSEY DS, 1995, SOC SCI QUART, V76, P527 TAYLOR RB, 1995, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V539, P28, DOI 10.1177/0002716295539001003 Sampson R., 1995, CRIME INEQUALITY, P37 HADDEN L, 1995, CODEBOOK AM HOUSING, V1 *US BUR CENS, 1995, 1992 EC CENS ZIP COD ALBA RD, 1994, SOC FORCES, V73, P395, DOI 10.2307/2579815 MASSEY DS, 1994, AM SOCIOL REV, V59, P425, DOI 10.2307/2095942 LEE BA, 1994, DEMOGRAPHY, V31, P249, DOI 10.2307/2061885 ROSENBAUM E, 1994, SOC FORCES, V72, P725, DOI 10.2307/2579778 FARLEY R, 1994, AM SOCIOL REV, V59, P23, DOI 10.2307/2096131 HARRELL A, 1994, ANTICIPATING COMBATI Denton Nancy A., 1993, AM APARTHEID SEGREGA US DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE BUREAU OF THE CENSUS, 1993, CENS POP HOUS 1990 U *US BUR CENS, 1993, 1987 EC CENS, V2 KOHFELD CW, 1992, ARRESTS COMMUNICATIO RONCEK DW, 1991, CRIMINOLOGY, V29, P725, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.1991.tb01086.x MIETHE TD, 1991, SOC FORCES, V70, P165, DOI 10.2307/2580067 BOEHM TP, 1991, REV ECON STAT, V73, P59, DOI 10.2307/2109687 DEANE GD, 1990, DEMOGRAPHY, V27, P65, DOI 10.2307/2061553 Skogan W. G, 1990, DISORDER DECLINE CRI ALDRICH H, 1989, SOC FORCES, V67, P920, DOI 10.2307/2579708 BUCK AJ, 1989, CANADIAN APPRAISER, V33, P23 MASSEY DS, 1987, AM SOCIOL REV, V52, P802, DOI 10.2307/2095836 SAMPSON RJ, 1987, AM J SOCIOL, V93, P348, DOI 10.1086/228748 Rubin DB, 1987, MULTIPLE IMPUTATION Wilson W. J., 1987, TRULY DISADVANTAGED SAMPSON RJ, 1986, SOCIOL SOC RES, V70, P310 Bursik Jr. R. J., 1986, SOCIAL ECOLOGY CRIME, P63 SCHUERMAN L, 1986, CRIME JUSTICE, V8, P67, DOI 10.1086/449120 MASSEY DS, 1985, AM SOCIOL REV, V50, P94, DOI 10.2307/2095343 MASSEY DS, 1984, AM J SOCIOL, V89, P836, DOI 10.1086/227946 RONCEK DW, 1981, SOC FORCES, V60, P74, DOI 10.2307/2577933 LAGORY M, 1981, URBAN SOCIAL SPACE *CENS POP HOUS, 1980, ZIP COD EQ FIL MARF Schelling T., 1978, MICROMOTIVES MACROBE THALER R, 1978, J URBAN ECON, V5, P137, DOI 10.1016/0094-1190(78)90042-6 VANVALEY TL, 1977, AM J SOCIOL, V82, P826 ALDRICH H, 1976, AM J SOCIOL, V81, P846, DOI 10.1086/226144 Ferracuti Franco, 1967, SUBCULTURE VIOLENCE GIBBS JP, 1962, AM SOCIOL REV, V27, P667, DOI 10.2307/2089624 HIPP JR, CRIME DELIN IN PRESS NR 89 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD AUG PY 2011 VL 58 IS 3 BP 410 EP 432 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.3.410 PG 23 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 804SE UT WOS:000293673500005 ER PT J AU Gillham, PF Edwards, B AF Gillham, Patrick F. Edwards, Bob TI Legitimacy Management, Preservation of Exchange Relationships, and the Dissolution of the Mobilization for Global Justice Coalition SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE coalition; globalization; legitimacy; management; protest ID UNITED-STATES; ORGANIZATIONAL LEGITIMACY; SOCIAL-MOVEMENT; ANTIWAR MOVEMENT; CONTENTION; DYNAMICS; PROTESTS; INDUSTRY; CONTEXT; END AB Throughout much of 2001 the Mobilization for Global Justice Coalition (MGJC) planned a series of mass demonstrations targeting the World Bank and International Monetary Fund to occur in Washington. DC in late September The terrorist attacks of September 11 created a crisis for the 117 social movement organizations (SMO) involved in the broad-based coalition and forced protest leaders to reevaluate their coalition strategy. This analysis chronicles the dissolution of the MGJC and explains the decisions made by SMO leaders to abandon or disband the coalition. By leading their organizations in ways they expected to be perceived as legitimate in the eyes of key allies and supporters, leaders sought to preserve their SMO's core exchange relationships through the 9/11 crisis. At a minimum, leaders sought to insulate their organizations from irreparable harm and position them competitively for the uncertainties of the post-crisis environment. Many organizations made decisions commensurate with homophilous or exemplary organizations in a process resembling "social contagion" while others capitalized on the crisis enhancing their influence. This research relies upon participant observations of pre- and post-9/11 organizing meetings, examination of coalition documents, and interviews with key MGJC leaders. C1 [Gillham, Patrick F.] Univ Idaho, Dept Sociol & Anthropol, Moscow, ID 83844 USA. [Edwards, Bob] E Carolina Univ, Greenville, NC 27858 USA. RP Gillham, PF (reprint author), Univ Idaho, Dept Sociol & Anthropol, POB 441110, Moscow, ID 83844 USA EM gillham@uidaho.edu CR Heaney MT, 2011, MOBILIZATION, V16, P45 Van Dyke N, 2010, SOC MOV PROTEST CONT, V34, pXI Staggenborg S, 2010, SOC MOV PROTEST CONT, V34, P316 Carmin J, 2009, ENVIRON POLIT, V18, P351, DOI 10.1080/09644010902823550 Woehrle Lynn M, 2008, CONTESTING PATRIOTIS Smith J, 2008, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS GLO Heaney MT, 2008, RES SOC MOV CONFL CH, V28, P39, DOI 10.1016/S0163-786X(08)28002-X Hadden J, 2007, MOBILIZATION, V12, P359 Coombs W. T, 2007, ONGOING CRISIS COMMU Levi M, 2006, POLIT STUD-LONDON, V54, P651, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9248.2006.00629.x Krinsky J, 2006, SOCIOL FORUM, V21, P623, DOI 10.1007/s11206-006-9036-0 Meyer DS, 2005, MOBILIZATION, V10, P327 Minkoff DC, 2005, MOBILIZATION, V10, P289 Tarrow S, 2005, NEW TRANSNATIONAL AC Della Porta D., 2005, TRANSNATIONAL PROTES NOAKES JA, 2005, POLIC SOC, V15, P235, DOI 10.1080/10439460500168576 Smith J, 2004, GLOBAL NETW, V4, P413, DOI 10.1111/j.1471-0374.2004.00102.x Diani M, 2004, THEOR SOC, V33, P281, DOI 10.1023/B:RYSO.0000038610.00045.07 Obach B. K., 2004, LABOR ENV MOVEMENT Q Edwards B., 2004, BLACKWELL COMPANION, P116, DOI 10.1002/9780470999103.ch6 Meyer DS, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P125, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.30.012703.110545 Williams R. H., 2004, BLACKWELL COMPANION, P91, DOI 10.1002/9780470999103.ch5 WOOD LJ, 2004, J WORLD SYSTEMS RES, V10, P3 Van Dyke N, 2003, SOC PROBL, V50, P226, DOI 10.1525/sp.2003.50.2.226 GILLHAM P, 2003, SEPTEMBER 11 ACCOUNT, P483 GILLHAM PF, 2003, THESIS U COLORADO BO McCammon Holly J., 2002, MOBILIZATION, V7, P231 2002, AFL CIO NEWS AR 0311 *50 YEARS IS EN, 2002, 50 YEARS Jones AW, 2001, SOCIOL SPECTRUM, V21, P207, DOI 10.1080/02732170121587 Massey J. E., 2001, J BUS COMMUN, V38, P153, DOI 10.1177/002194360103800202 Smith Jackie, 2001, MOBILIZATION, V6, P1 2001, AFL CIO NEWS AR 0920 *ACC, 2001, ANT CONV ISS NEW CAL [Anonymous], 2001, ASS PRESS 0917 *IAC, 2001, BEAT BACK BUSH ATT S WASKOW A, 2001, COMMUNICATION 0918 DANAHER K, 2001, DEMOCRATIZING GLOBAL NJEHU NN, 2001, DEMOCRATIZING GLOBAL, P46 *ACC, 2001, DON ACC MCADAM D, 2001, DYNAMIC CONTENTION NJEHU NN, 2001, EC JUSTICE NEWS, V4, P1 NJEHU NN, 2001, EC JUSTICE NEWS, V4, P10 *ESS ACT, 2001, END GLOB AP CAL *ACC, 2001, GEN INF PACK *ESS ACT, 2001, IMF WB ANN M SEPT 28 2001, INFOSHOP NEWS A 0913 *JUB, 2001, JUB US NETW IS BORN *IAC, 2001, LETS REALL HELP SEPT *MGJC, 2001, MOB DEF DEM REST TAK 2001, STOP WB IMF LIS 0916 *IAC, 2001, VID WAR RAC AR NOT A *IAC, 2001, WAR IS NOT ANSW Benjamin M, 2000, GLOBALIZE THIS, P67 GILLHAM PF, 2000, SOCIAL JUSTICE, V27, P212 Perrow C., 1999, NORMAL ACCIDENTS LIV Swank E, 1997, J POLIT MIL SOCIOL, V25, P211 MARULLO S, 1997, COALITIONS POLITICAL, P181 MEYER DS, 1997, COALITIONS POLITICAL, P237 *REL WORK GROUP, 1997, MOR IMP ADDR STRUCT Edwards B, 1995, AM SOCIOL REV, V60, P908, DOI 10.2307/2096432 GREVE HR, 1995, ADMIN SCI QUART, V40, P444, DOI 10.2307/2393793 SUCHMAN MC, 1995, ACAD MANAGE REV, V20, P571, DOI 10.2307/258788 ALDRICH HE, 1994, ACAD MANAGE REV, V19, P645, DOI 10.2307/258740 ELSBACH KD, 1994, ADMIN SCI QUART, V39, P57, DOI 10.2307/2393494 MEYER DS, 1993, SOCIOL FORUM, V8, P157, DOI 10.1007/BF01115488 BENFORD RD, 1993, SOC FORCES, V71, P677, DOI 10.2307/2579890 CLEMENS ES, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P755, DOI 10.1086/230089 Staggenborg Suzanne, 1993, RES POLITICAL SOCIOL, V6, P319 ELSBACH KD, 1992, ACAD MANAGE J, V35, P699, DOI 10.2307/256313 OLIVER C, 1991, ACAD MANAGE REV, V16, P145, DOI 10.2307/258610 Jepperson R. L., 1991, NEW I ORG ANAL, P143 McPhail C., 1991, MYTH MADDING CROWD MCCARTHY JD, 1991, RES SOCIAL MOVEMENTS, V13, P45 KLANDERMANS PB, 1990, CHALLENGING POLITICA, P122 TAYLOR V, 1989, AM SOCIOL REV, V54, P761, DOI 10.2307/2117752 Zald Mayer N., 1987, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS ORG STAGGENBORG, 1986, SOC PROBL, V33, P374 DIMAGGIO PJ, 1983, AM SOCIOL REV, V48, P147, DOI 10.2307/2095101 Piven Frances, 1979, POOR PEOPLES MOVEMEN Tilly C., 1978, MOBILIZATION REVOLUT DOWLING J, 1975, PAC SOCIOL REV, V18, P122 ZALD MN, 1966, SOC FORCES, V44, P327, DOI 10.2307/2575833 NR 83 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD AUG PY 2011 VL 58 IS 3 BP 433 EP 460 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.433 PG 28 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 804SE UT WOS:000293673500006 ER PT J AU Haydu, J AF Haydu, Jeffrey TI Cultural Modeling in Two Eras of US Food Protest: Grahamites (1830s) and Organic Advocates (1960s-70s) SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE social movements; framing; culture; food; comparative historical sociology ID SOCIAL-MOVEMENTS; DIFFUSION; ORGANIZATIONS; DYNAMICS; TRANSFORMATION; AGRICULTURE; NETWORKS; POLITICS; EARTH AB This article extends theories of social movement diffusion to encompass other kinds of cultural modeling. Using a comparison of two cases of food protest in the United Stales the health food movement of William Sylvester Graham (1830s) and the early organic movement (1960s-1970s)-I emphasize similarities in underlying grievances and in the general advocacy of natural food alternatives. The two movements differed dramatically, however, in framing and tactics. I focus on contrasts in the religious significance they assigned to diet, in their democratic commitments, in the relationship they constructed between personal transformation and social change, and in their use of state-centered strategies. These frames and tactics transposed to food reform more general scripts associated with cultural institutions and movements of the time, particularly evangelical churches and temperance (Grahamites), and environmentalism, the New Left, and the wider counterculture (organic advocates). C1 Univ Calif San Diego, Dept Sociol, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA. RP Haydu, J (reprint author), Univ Calif San Diego, Dept Sociol, 9500 Gilman Dr, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA EM jhaydu@ucsd.edu CR Johnston J., 2010, FOODIES DEMOCRACY DI Earl J, 2010, INFORM COMMUN SOC, V13, P209, DOI 10.1080/13691180902934170 Slater D, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P203 Lamont M, 2009, PROFESSORS THINK INS DeSoucey M., 2009, The globalization of food, P81 JOHNSON V, 2009, SOCIAL MOVEMENT STUD, V8, P167 LAVIN C, 2009, THEORY EVENT, V12 Lexier R, 2008, LABOUR-TRAVAIL, P256 Edgington RH, 2008, AGR HIST, V82, P279, DOI 10.3098/ah.2008.82.3.279 Mische A., 2008, PARTISAN PUBLICS COM Schneiberg M., 2008, SAGE HDB ORG I, P648 WOODHOUSE KM, 2008, J STUDY RADICALISM, V2, P53 GOLDSTEIN R, 2008, NY TIMES 0204, pA21 SMITH J, 2008, SODA MOVEMENTS GLOBA HAEDICKE MA, 2008, THESIS U CALIFORNIA Shah DV, 2007, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V611, P6, DOI 10.1177/0002716207299647 Haveman HA, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P117 Della Porta D, 2007, GLOBAL NETW, V7, P1, DOI 10.1111/j.1471-0374.2006.00154.x GUTHMAN J, 2007, ALTERNATIVE FOOD GEO, P241 BELASCO WJ, 2007, APPETITE CHANGE COUN GOODMAN D, 2007, CONSTRUCTING ALTERNA, P23 DUPUIS E, 2007, GASTRONOMICA, V7, P34 McMillian J, 2006, REV AM HIST, V34, P551, DOI 10.1353/rah.2006.0066 Andrews KT, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P752 Skrentny JD, 2006, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P1762, DOI 10.1086/499910 Nepstad SE, 2006, MOBILIZATION, V11, P1 Ferrieres Madeleine, 2006, SACRED COW MAD COW H Pollan Michael, 2006, OMNIVORES DILEMMA NA Young Michael P, 2006, BEARING WITNESS SIN Fromartz Samuel, 2006, ORGANIC INC NATURAL MCGRATH M, 2006, EATING EDEN FOOD AM, P162 KAMP D, 2006, US ARUGULA SUN DRIED Egan M, 2005, NEW YORK HIST, V86, P205 DELLAPORTA D, 2005, TRANSNATIONAL PROTES, P1 Guthman J, 2004, CAL STUD CRIT HUM GE, V11, P1 Micheletti M., 2004, POLITICS PRODUCTS MA Soule SarahA, 2004, BLACKWELL COMPANION, P294, DOI 10.1002/9780470999103.ch13 WHITTIER N, 2004, BLACKWELL COMPANION, P531, DOI 10.1002/9780470999103.ch23 MCGRATH M, 2004, BUSINESS EC HIST ON, V2, P1 Rome A, 2003, J AM HIST, V90, P525 Micheletti M, 2003, POLITICAL VIRTUE AND SHOPPING: INDIVIDUALS, CONSUMERISM, AND COLLECTIVE ACTION, P1, DOI 10.1057/9781403973764 LEVENSTEIN H, 2003, PARADOX PLENTY SOCIA HARTMAN S, 2003, GASTRONOMICA, V3, P29, DOI 10.1525/gfc.2003.3.2.29 SZCYGIEL B, 2003, J URBAN HIST, V29, P107 Haydu J, 2002, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P1424, DOI 10.1086/342556 Lamont M, 2002, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V28, P167, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.28.110601.141107 Polletta Francesca, 2002, FREEDOM IS ENDLESS M NOLL M. A., 2002, AM GOD J EDWARDS A L Marx Ferree M., 2002, SHAPING ABORTION DIS HABER B, 2002, HARDTACK HOME FRIES BRAUNSTEIN P, 2002, IMAGINE NATION AM CO MILLER T, 2002, IMAGINE NATION AM CO, P327 Reisner AE, 2001, AM BEHAV SCI, V44, P1389, DOI 10.1177/00027640121956746 McAdam D., 2001, DYNAMICS CONTENTION Scott W.R, 2001, I ORG CONFORD P, 2001, ORIGINS ORGANIC MOVE Stevens Mitchell L., 2001, KINGDOM CHILDREN CUL Ganz M, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P1003, DOI 10.1086/210398 Stryker S, 2000, SELF IDENTITY SOCIAL, V13 Lamont M., 2000, RETHINKING COMP CULT, P1, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511628108.001 MERTIG AG, 2000, HDB ENV SOCIOLOGY, P448 Clemens ES, 1999, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V25, P441, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.25.1.441 BELASCO WJ, 1999, FOOD GLOBAL HIST, P273 STEINBERG M, 1999, FIGHTING WORDS WORKI FLANDRIN JL, 1999, FOOD CULINARY HIST A Strang D, 1998, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V24, P265, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.24.1.265 Tarrow S., 1998, POWER MOVEMENT SOCIA Heimer C., 1998, SAKE CHILDREN SOCIAL Rossinow D, 1997, RADICAL HIST REV, P79 Minkoff DC, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P779, DOI 10.2307/2657360 Slater D., 1997, CONSUMER CULTURE MOD Jasper James M., 1997, ART MORAL PROTEST CU Clemens Elisabeth S., 1997, PEOPLES LOBBY ORG IN Hochschild A.R., 1997, TIME BIND WORK BECOM DiMaggio P, 1997, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V23, P263, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.263 WALTERS RG, 1997, AM REFORMERS 1815 18 NOWACEK D, 1997, THESIS U WISCONSIN M Schneirov M, 1996, SOCIOL QUART, V37, P627, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1996.tb01756.x SWART WJ, 1995, SOCIOL QUART, V36, P465, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1995.tb00448.x Della Porta D., 1995, POLITICS SOCIAL PROT, P229 McAdam Doug, 1995, REPERTOIRES CYCLES C, P217 MEYER DS, 1994, SOC PROBL, V41, P277, DOI 10.1525/sp.1994.41.2.03x0438v Cox Craig, 1994, STOREFRONT REVOLUTIO HURT RD, 1994, AM AGR BRIEF HIST STRANG D, 1993, THEOR SOC, V22, P487, DOI 10.1007/BF00993595 MCADAM D, 1993, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V528, P56, DOI 10.1177/0002716293528001005 SEWELL WH, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1 Skocpol Theda, 1992, PROTECTING SOLDIERS Benford Robert, 1992, FRONTIERS SOCIAL MOV, P133 DiMaggio P., 1992, CULTIVATING DIFFEREN, P21 GUSFIELD JR, 1992, CULTIVATING DIFFEREN, P75 GOLDSTEIN MS, 1992, HLTH MOVEMENT PROMOT Sellers Charles, 1991, MARKET REVOLUTION JA Friedland R., 1991, NEW I ORG ANAL, P232 POWELL WW, 1991, NEW I ORG ANAL, P1 BILLINGS DB, 1990, AM J SOCIOL, V96, P1, DOI 10.1086/229491 Melucci A., 1989, NOMADS PRESENT SOCIA Hatch N.O., 1989, DEMOCRATIZATION AM C McAdam D., 1988, FREEDOM SUMMER LARKIN J, 1988, RESHAPING EVERYDAY L GRISWOLD W, 1987, AM J SOCIOL, V92, P1077, DOI 10.1086/228628 JOHNSON P, 1986, SOC SCI INFORM, V25, P521, DOI 10.1177/053901886025002012 KITSCHELT HP, 1986, BRIT J POLIT SCI, V16, P57 Schwartz Hillel, 1986, NEVER SATISFIED CULT GILKESON JS, 1986, MIDDLE CLASS PROVIDE SISSON W, 1985, THESIS U DELAWARE NE Bourdieu P, 1984, DISTINCTION SOCIAL C SOKOLOW JA, 1983, EROS MODERNIZATION S Goody Jack, 1982, COOKING CUISINE CLAS McAdam Douglas, 1982, POLITICAL PROCESS DE Whorton James C., 1982, CRUSADERS FITNESS HI BREINES W, 1982, COMMUNITY ORG NEW LE Faler Paul G., 1981, MECH MANUFACTURERS E Nissenbaum Stephen, 1980, SEX DIET DEBILITY JA JOHNSON PE, 1978, SHOPKEEPERS MILLENNI Boyer Paul, 1978, URBAN MASSES MORAL O BRISSETT D, 1978, J AM CULTURE, V1, P61 VANBUREN MC, 1977, THESIS U CALIFORNIA Hodgson Godfrey, 1976, AM OUR TIME LAPPE FM, 1975, DIET SMALL PLANET COLE EW, 1975, THESIS INDIANA U BLO WALLACE AFC, 1972, ROCKDALE GROWTH AM V THOMAS A, 1972, VEGETARIAN EPICURE 1970, MOTHER EARTH NEWS DANHOF CH, 1969, CHANGE AGR NO US 182 Geertz Clifford, 1968, ISLAM OBSERVED RELIG 1968, WHOLE EARTH CATALOG Marx Leo, 1964, MACHINE GARDEN TECHN Gusfield Joseph, 1963, SYMBOLIC CRUSADE STA 1960, ORGANIC GARDENING FA WALKER WB, 1955, THESIS J HOPKINS U B ALCOTT WA, 1859, 40 YEARS WILDERNESS GRAHAM S, 1839, LECT SCI HUMAN LIFE LEDUC TH, 1839, NEW YORK HIST, V37, P190 1837, GRAHAM J HLTH LONGEV ALCOTT WA, 1837, LIB HLTH TEACHER HUM GRAHAM S, 1837, TREATISE BREAD BREAD ALCOTT WA, 1835, MORAL REFORMER TEACH GRAHAM S, 1834, AESCULAPIAN TABLETS NR 139 TC 1 Z9 1 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD AUG PY 2011 VL 58 IS 3 BP 461 EP 487 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.3.461 PG 27 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 804SE UT WOS:000293673500007 ER PT J AU Spires, AJ AF Spires, Anthony J. TI Contingent Symbiosis and Civil Society in an Authoritarian State: Understanding the Survival of China's Grassroots NGOs SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID PUBLIC SPHERE; CONTEMPORARY CHINA; POLITICAL TRUST; EASTERN-EUROPE; ASSOCIATIONS; CORPORATISM; GOVERNMENT; BUSINESS; GUANXI AB In the study of civil society, Tocqueville-inspired research has helped illuminate important connections between associations and democracy, while corporatism has provided a robust framework for understanding officially approved civil society organizations in authoritarian regimes. Yet neither approach accounts for the experiences of ostensibly illegal grassroots nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) in an authoritarian state. Drawing on fieldwork in China, I argue that grassroots NGOs can survive in an authoritarian regime when the state is fragmented and when censorship keeps information local. Moreover, grassroots NGOs survive only insofar as they refrain from democratic claims-making and address social needs that might fuel grievances against the state. For its part, the state tolerates such groups as long as particular state agents can claim credit for any good works while avoiding blame for any problems. Grassroots NGOs and an authoritarian state can thus coexist in a "contingent symbiosis" that-far from pointing to an inevitable democratization-allows ostensibly illegal groups to operate openly while relieving the state of some of its social welfare obligations. C1 Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Dept Sociol, Ctr Civil Soc Studies, Shatin, Hong Kong, Peoples R China. RP Spires, AJ (reprint author), Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Dept Sociol, Ctr Civil Soc Studies, 4th Floor,Sino Bldg, Shatin, Hong Kong, Peoples R China EM ajspires@cuhk.edu.hk CR Walker ET, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P83 ANDREWS KT, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P1191 Unger Jonathan, 2008, ASS CHINESE STATE CO, P48 UNGER J, 2008, ASS CHINESE STATE CO, P1 KEECHMARX S, 2008, ASS CHINESE STATE CO, P175 PIERRE FL, 2008, DECENTRALIZED AUTHOR HSU CL, 2008, J CIVIL SOC, V4, P81, DOI 10.1080/17448680802335144 Kang XG, 2008, MOD CHINA, V34, P36, DOI 10.1177/0097700407308138 *MIN CIV AFF, 2008, 2007 SHEH ZUZH YU KP, 2007, J PARTY SCH CENTRAL, V11, P14 Stalley P, 2006, CHINA QUART, P333 OBrien KJ, 2006, CAMB STUD CONTENT, P1, DOI 10.2277/ 0521678528 Ma Q., 2006, NONGOVERNMENTAL ORG ZHAO LQ, 2006, STUDY TIMES 0821 Straughn JB, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P1598, DOI 10.1086/428818 Riley D, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P288 ELBAYAR K., 2005, INT J NOT FOR PROFIT, V7, P3 Streeck W., 2005, HDB POLITICAL SOCIOL, P441 CHAN KM, 2005, CIVIL LIFE GLOBALIZA, P20, DOI 10.4324/9780203330890_chapter_2 KATIRAI N, 2005, INT J NOT FOR PROFIT, V7, P28 DALEN K, 2005, THESIS U BERGEN Zhang X, 2004, CHINA J, V52, P97 Li LJ, 2004, MOD CHINA, V30, P228, DOI 10.1177/0097700403261824 Economy E. C., 2004, RIVER RUNS BLACK ENV Alagappa M., 2004, CIVIL SOC POLITICAL, P419 ALAGAPPA M, 2004, CIVIL SOC POLITICAL, P25 ASPINALL E, 2004, CIVIL SOC POLITICAL, P61 KIM S, 2004, CIVIL SOC POLITICAL, P138 FAN Y, 2004, CIVIL SOC POLITICAL, P164 WANG SG, 2004, KOREA OBS, V35, P485 Fung A, 2003, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V29, P515, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.29.010202.100134 2003, CHINA RIGHTS FORUM, V3, P22 Ma QS, 2002, NONPROF VOLUNT SEC Q, V31, P305, DOI 10.1177/0899764002313001 Yang MMH, 2002, CHINA QUART, P459 GOLD T, 2002, SOCIAL CONNECTIONS C Foster KW, 2002, CHINA J, V47, P41 WU FS, 2002, NEW PARTNERS OLD BRO Foster KW, 2001, STUD COMP INT DEV, V35, P84, DOI 10.1007/BF02732709 Shi TJ, 2001, COMP POLIT, V33, P401, DOI 10.2307/422441 Warren M, 2001, DEMOCRACY ASS ZHANG NH, 2001, CHINESE WOMEN ORG CA, P159 Ost D, 2000, POLIT SOC, V28, P503, DOI 10.1177/0032329200028004004 Bernstein TP, 2000, CHINA QUART, P742 Putnam R. D., 2000, BOWLING ALONE COLLAP Davis D., 2000, CONSUMER REVOLUTION LEE CC, 2000, POWER MONEY MEDIA CO SAICH A, 2000, CHINA QUART, V161, P124 MADSEN R, 2000, CONSUMER REVOLUTION, P312 FAN Y, 2000, THESIS YALE U CHAN KM, 1999, SHEHUIXUE YANJIU, V4, P64 ULLMAN C, 1998, WELFARE STATES OTHER Berman S, 1997, WORLD POLIT, V49, P401, DOI 10.1353/wp.1997.0008 Brook T, 1997, CIVIL SOC CHINA Salamon LM, 1997, SOCIETY, V34, P60, DOI 10.1007/BF02823101 OBrien KJ, 1996, WORLD POLIT, V49, P31, DOI 10.1353/wp.1996.0022 Unger J, 1996, CHINA QUART, P795 Foley MW, 1996, J DEMOCR, V7, P38, DOI 10.1353/jod.1996.0048 White G., 1996, SEARCH CIVIL SOC MAR PUTNAM RD, 1996, GLOBAL RESURGENCE DE, P290 Fukuyama F., 1995, TRUST SOCIAL VIRTUES Verba S., 1995, VOICE EQUALITY CIVIC Unger J., 1995, AUSTR J CHINESE AFFA, V33, P29 BIAN YJ, 1994, CHINA QUART, P971 PEARSON MM, 1994, AUSTR J CHINESE AFFA, V31, P25 YANG M, 1994, FAVORS BANQUETS ART CALHOUN C, 1993, PUBLIC CULTURE, V5, P267 HUANG PCC, 1993, MOD CHINA, V19, P216, DOI 10.1177/009770049301900207 CHAMBERLAIN HB, 1993, MOD CHINA, V19, P199, DOI 10.1177/009770049301900206 WAKEMAN F, 1993, MOD CHINA, V19, P108, DOI 10.1177/009770049301900202 ROWE WT, 1993, MOD CHINA, V19, P139, DOI 10.1177/009770049301900203 RANKIN MB, 1993, MOD CHINA, V19, P158, DOI 10.1177/009770049301900204 MADSEN R, 1993, MOD CHINA, V19, P183, DOI 10.1177/009770049301900205 Putnam R, 1993, MAKING DEMOCRACY WOR Chan Anita, 1993, AUSTR J CHINESE AFFA, V29, P31 Lieberthal K. G, 1992, BUREAUCRACY POLITICS OST D, 1989, E EUR POLIT SOC, V3, P152 TIEN HM, 1989, GREAT TRANSITION POL Lieberthal K., 1988, POLICY MAKING CHINA de Tocqueville Alexis, 1988, DEMOCRACY AM CHIROT D, 1980, THEOR SOC, V9, P363 Gross Jan T., 1979, POLISH SOC GERMAN OC LEHMBRUCH G, 1977, COMP POLIT STUD, V10, P91 SCHMITTE.PC, 1974, REV POLIT, V36, P85 WIARDA HJ, 1974, REV POLIT, V36, P3 NEWTON RC, 1974, REV POLIT, V36, P34 MALLOY JM, 1974, REV POLIT, V36, P52 Arendt H., 1973, ORIGINS TOTALITARIAN Kornhauser W., 1959, POLITICS MASS SOC MANOILESCO M, 1936, SIECLE CORPORATISME NR 89 TC 1 Z9 1 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD JUL PY 2011 VL 117 IS 1 BP 1 EP 45 PG 45 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 816EP UT WOS:000294581800001 ER PT J AU Montgomery, JD AF Montgomery, James D. TI The Population Dynamics of Black-White-Mulatto Racial Systems SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID PAIR-FORMATION; MODELS; TRANSMISSION; MOBILITY AB Building on Preston and Campbell's two-sex model of intergenerational transmission, this article provides a theoretical analysis of the dynamics of the racial distribution in black-white-mulatto systems. The author shows that "bounded" patterns of racial classification and switching imply long-run racial homogeneity in the absence of differential reproduction. Beyond the theoretical analysis, the author attempts to account for the dramatic growth of the white population share in Puerto Rico in the early 20th century. Because the effects of racial classification and differential reproduction were roughly offsetting, the observed growth of the white share can be attributed almost entirely to racial switching. C1 Univ Wisconsin, Dept Sociol, Madison, WI 53706 USA. RP Montgomery, JD (reprint author), Univ Wisconsin, Dept Sociol, 1180 Observ Dr, Madison, WI 53706 USA EM jmontgom@ssc.wisc.edu CR Beller E, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P507 Perez AD, 2009, SOCIOL METHODOL, V39, P31 Caswell H, 2008, DEMOGR RES, V18, P59, DOI 10.4054/DemRes.2008.18.3 Loveman M, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P915 Schwartzman LF, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P940 LOVEMAN M, 2007, CARIBBEAN STUD, V35, P3 Telles Edward E., 2004, RACE ANOTHER AM SIGN ALLMAN ES, 2004, MATH MODELS BIOL Voas D, 2003, BRIT J SOCIOL, V54, P83, DOI 10.1080/0007131032000045914 Duany J, 2002, PUERTO RICAN NATION Preston SH, 2001, DEMOGRAPHY MEASURING Farina L., 2000, POSITIVE LINEAR SYST INABA H, 2000, MATH POPUL STUD, V7, P365 Martcheva M, 1999, MATH BIOSCI, V157, P1, DOI 10.1016/S0025-5564(98)10074-3 Pollard JH, 1997, MATH COMPUT MODEL, V26, P11, DOI 10.1016/S0895-7177(97)00166-0 PRUSS J, 1994, J MATH BIOL, V33, P17, DOI 10.1007/BF00160172 STROGATZ S. H., 1994, NONLINEAR DYNAMICS C BONNEUIL N, 1994, MATH POPULATION STUD, V5 HAYES BC, 1993, J MARRIAGE FAM, V55, P755, DOI 10.2307/353355 PRESTON SH, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P997, DOI 10.1086/230135 Abraham R. H., 1992, DYNAMICS GEOMETRY BE Drazin P.G., 1992, NONLINEAR SYSTEMS DAVIS FJ, 1991, WHO IS BLACK ONE NAT POLLAK RA, 1990, J POLIT ECON, V98, P399, DOI 10.1086/261683 HADELER KP, 1989, ACTA APPL MATH, V14, P91, DOI 10.1007/BF00046676 FARARO TJ, 1989, MEANING GEN THEORETI Lieberson S., 1988, MANY STRANDS ETHNIC SCHOEN R, 1988, MODELING MULTIGROUP LEE RD, 1987, DEMOGRAPHY, V24, P443, DOI 10.2307/2061385 CASWELL H, 1986, AM NAT, V128, P707, DOI 10.1086/284598 POLLAK RA, 1986, DEMOGRAPHY, V23, P247, DOI 10.2307/2061619 Schwartz Joseph E, 1984, CROSSCUTTING SOCIAL Blau P.M, 1977, INEQUALITY HETEROGEN Hoetink Harry, 1967, 2 VARIANTS CARIBBEAN HARRIS M, 1963, LUSOBRAZILIAN REV, V1, P21 Simon HA, 1952, AM SOCIOL REV, V17, P202, DOI 10.2307/2087661 Eckard EW, 1947, AM J SOCIOL, V52, P498, DOI 10.1086/220070 Senior Clarence, 1947, PUERTO RICAN EMIGRAT Burma JH, 1946, AM J SOCIOL, V52, P18, DOI 10.1086/219915 NR 39 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD JUL PY 2011 VL 117 IS 1 BP 46 EP 89 PG 44 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 816EP UT WOS:000294581800002 ER PT J AU Aral, S Van Alstyne, M AF Aral, Sinan Van Alstyne, Marshall TI The Diversity-Bandwidth Trade-off SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID EVOLVING SOCIAL NETWORK; STRUCTURAL HOLES; AUTO-CORRELATION; WORK GROUPS; WEAK TIES; KNOWLEDGE; PERFORMANCE; INFORMATION; MARKET; ORGANIZATIONS AB The authors propose that a trade-off between network diversity and communications bandwidth regulates access to novel information because a more diverse network structure increases novelty at a cost of reducing information flow. Received novelty then depends on whether (a) the information overlap is small enough, (b) alters' topical knowledge is shallow enough, and (c) alters' knowledge stocks refresh slowly enough to justify bridging structural holes. Social network and e-mail content from an executive recruiting firm show that bridging ties can actually offer less novelty for these reasons, suggesting that the strength of weak ties and structural holes depend on brokers' information environments. C1 [Aral, Sinan] NYU, Stern Sch Business, New York, NY 10027 USA. [Van Alstyne, Marshall] Boston Univ, Sch Management, Boston, MA 02215 USA. RP Aral, S (reprint author), NYU, Stern Sch Business, New York, NY 10027 USA EM sinan@stern.nyu.edu CR Aral S, 2011, MARKET SCI, V30, P217, DOI 10.1287/mksc.1100.0596 Currarini S, 2010, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V107, P4857, DOI 10.1073/pnas.0911793107 Lingo EL, 2010, ADMIN SCI QUART, V55, P47 Aral S, 2009, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V106, P21544, DOI 10.1073/pnas.0908800106 Kossinets G, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P405 Currarini S, 2009, ECONOMETRICA, V77, P1003, DOI 10.3982/ECTA7528 REYNOLDS M, 2009, P 8 ANN SEC C DISC S, P41 Reagans RE, 2008, IND CORP CHANGE, V17, P979, DOI 10.1093/icc/dtn037 Reagans RE, 2008, IND CORP CHANGE, V17, P903, DOI 10.1093/icc/dtn036 Burt RS, 2008, IND CORP CHANGE, V17, P953, DOI 10.1093/icc/dtn033 Lazer D, 2007, ADMIN SCI QUART, V52, P667 Centola D, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P702, DOI 10.1086/521848 Burt RS, 2007, ACAD MANAGE J, V50, P119 ARAL S, 2007, P 28 ANN INT C INF S ARAL S, 2007, 13172 NAT BUR EC RES Kossinets G, 2006, SCIENCE, V311, P88, DOI 10.1126/science.1116869 Uzzi B, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P447, DOI 10.1086/432782 Van Alstyne M, 2005, MANAGE SCI, V51, P851, DOI 10.1287/mnsc.1050.0363 Gibson DR, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P1561, DOI 10.1086/428689 Obstfeld D, 2005, ADMIN SCI QUART, V50, P100 Burt R. S., 2005, BROKERAGE CLOSURE IN Burt RS, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P349, DOI 10.1086/421787 Wu F, 2004, PHYSICA A, V337, P327, DOI 10.1016/j.physa.2004.01.030 Rodan S, 2004, STRATEGIC MANAGE J, V25, P541, DOI 10.1002/smj.398 Cummings JN, 2004, MANAGE SCI, V50, P352, DOI 10.1287/mnsc.1030.0134 Kutner M., 2004, APPL LINEAR REGRESSI Van Alstyne M, 2004, NETWORK SOCIETY: A CROSS-CULTURAL PERSPECTIVE, P145 Cummings JN, 2003, SOC NETWORKS, V25, P197, DOI 10.1016/S0378-8733(02)00049-7 Reagans R, 2003, ADMIN SCI QUART, V48, P240, DOI 10.2307/3556658 Kempe D., 2003, P 9 ACM SIGKDD INT C, P137, DOI 10.1145/956750.956769 VANALSTYNE M, 2003, M N AM ASS COMP SOC Hansen MT, 2002, ORGAN SCI, V13, P232, DOI 10.1287/orsc.13.3.232.2771 Hinds P, 2002, DISTRIBUTED WORK Lin N, 2002, SOCIAL CAPITAL THEOR Podolny JM, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P33, DOI 10.1086/323038 Reagans R, 2001, ORGAN SCI, V12, P502, DOI 10.1287/orsc.12.4.502.10637 Cramton CD, 2001, ORGAN SCI, V12, P346, DOI 10.1287/orsc.12.3.346.10098 Sparrowe RT, 2001, ACAD MANAGE J, V44, P316, DOI 10.2307/3069458 McPherson M, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P415, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.27.1.415 Finlay W, 2000, WORK OCCUPATION, V27, P377, DOI 10.1177/0730888400027003006 White HC, 2000, POETICS, V27, P117, DOI 10.1016/S0304-422X(99)00027-3 Burt RS, 2000, RES ORGAN BEHAV, V22, P345, DOI 10.1016/S0191-3085(00)22009-1 Helper S., 2000, IND CORP CHANGE, V9, P443, DOI 10.1093/icc/9.3.443 MISCHE A, 2000, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS NET, P258 Steinberg MW, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P736, DOI 10.1086/210359 Watts DJ, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P493, DOI 10.1086/210318 Krackhardt D, 1999, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V76, P770, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.76.5.770 Hansen MT, 1999, ADMIN SCI QUART, V44, P82, DOI 10.2307/2667032 Argote L., 1999, ORG LEARNING CREATIN Driscoll JC, 1998, REV ECON STAT, V80, P549, DOI 10.1162/003465398557825 Mische A, 1998, SOC RES, V65, P695 Tsai WP, 1998, ACAD MANAGE J, V41, P464, DOI 10.2307/257085 McLean PD, 1998, AM J SOCIOL, V104, P51, DOI 10.1086/210002 Watts DJ, 1998, NATURE, V393, P440, DOI 10.1038/30918 Weitzman ML, 1998, Q J ECON, V113, P331, DOI 10.1162/003355398555595 Hargadon A, 1997, ADMIN SCI QUART, V42, P716, DOI 10.2307/2393655 Podolny JM, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P673, DOI 10.2307/2657354 Uzzi B, 1997, ADMIN SCI QUART, V42, P35, DOI 10.2307/2393808 Walker G, 1997, ORGAN SCI, V8, P109, DOI 10.1287/orsc.8.2.109 Szulanski G, 1996, STRATEGIC MANAGE J, V17, P27 Eliasoph N, 1996, SOCIOL THEOR, V14, P262, DOI 10.2307/3045389 Uzzi B, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P674, DOI 10.2307/2096399 Lichterman P, 1996, SEARCH POLITICAL COM White HC, 1995, SOC RES, V62, P1035 LIANG DW, 1995, PERS SOC PSYCHOL B, V21, P384, DOI 10.1177/0146167295214009 Putnam R., 1995, J DEMOCR, V6, P65, DOI DOI 10.1353/JOD.1995.0002 KUMBASAR E, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V100, P477, DOI 10.1086/230544 GLAZER R, 1993, J MARKETING RES, V30, P509, DOI 10.2307/3172694 MARSDEN PV, 1993, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V22, P127, DOI 10.1177/0049124193022001006 PADGETT JF, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1259, DOI 10.1086/230190 ANCONA DG, 1992, ORGAN SCI, V3, P321, DOI 10.1287/orsc.3.3.321 GRANOVETTER M, 1992, NETWORKS AND ORGANIZATIONS : STRUCTURE, FORM, AND ACTION, P25 Burt R.S., 1992, STRUCTURAL HOLES SOC Drew Paul, 1992, TALK WORK INTERACTIO MONTGOMERY JD, 1991, AM ECON REV, V81, P1408 GLAZER R, 1991, J MARKETING, V55, P1, DOI 10.2307/1251953 March JG, 1991, ORGAN SCI, V2, P71, DOI 10.1287/orsc.2.1.71 Simon HA, 1991, ORGAN SCI, V2, P125, DOI 10.1287/orsc.2.1.125 Lave J., 1991, SITUATED LEARNING LE BAKER WE, 1990, AM J SOCIOL, V96, P589, DOI 10.1086/229573 KRACKHARDT D, 1990, ADMIN SCI QUART, V35, P342, DOI 10.2307/2393394 COHEN WM, 1990, ADMIN SCI QUART, V35, P128, DOI 10.2307/2393553 MARSDEN PV, 1990, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V16, P435, DOI 10.1146/annurev.so.16.080190.002251 Swedberg Richard, 1990, EC SOCIOLOGY EISENHARDT KM, 1989, ACAD MANAGE J, V32, P543, DOI 10.2307/256434 COLEMAN JS, 1988, AM J SOCIOL, V94, pS95, DOI 10.1086/228943 KRACKHARDT D, 1987, SOC NETWORKS, V9, P109, DOI 10.1016/0378-8733(87)90009-8 WEGNER E, 1987, THEORIES GROUP BEHAV, P185 Blau P., 1986, EXCHANGE POWER SOCIA GRANOVETTER M, 1985, AM J SOCIOL, V91, P1420 BAKER WE, 1984, AM J SOCIOL, V89, P775, DOI 10.1086/227944 HUBER GP, 1984, MANAGE SCI, V30, P928, DOI 10.1287/mnsc.30.8.928 FRIEDKIN NE, 1984, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V12, P235, DOI 10.1177/0049124184012003001 LOFTIN C, 1983, AM SOCIOL REV, V48, P121, DOI 10.2307/2095150 Pfeffer Jeffrey, 1983, RES ORGAN BEHAV, V5, P299 DOW MM, 1982, SOC NETWORKS, V4, P169, DOI 10.1016/0378-8733(82)90031-4 BERNARD HR, 1981, CONNECTIONS, V4, P11 WHITE H, 1980, ECONOMETRICA, V48, P817, DOI 10.2307/1912934 DOREIAN P, 1980, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V9, P29, DOI 10.1177/004912418000900102 Weick K, 1979, SOCIAL PSYCHOL ORG GRANOVETTER M, 1978, AM J SOCIOL, V83, P1420, DOI 10.1086/226707 HAUSMAN JA, 1978, ECONOMETRICA, V46, P1251, DOI 10.2307/1913827 Schelling T., 1978, MICROMOTIVES MACROBE Allen T.J., 1977, MANAGING FLOW TECHNO SALTON G, 1975, COMMUN ACM, V18, P613, DOI 10.1145/361219.361220 ORD K, 1975, J AM STAT ASSOC, V70, P120, DOI 10.2307/2285387 GALBRAIT.JR, 1974, INTERFACES, V4, P28, DOI 10.1287/inte.4.3.28 GRANOVET.MS, 1973, AM J SOCIOL, V78, P1360, DOI 10.1086/225469 Bell D., 1973, COMING POSTINDUSTRIA Newcomb T., 1961, ACQUAINTANCE PROCESS Goffman E, 1961, ENCOUNTERS Heider F, 1958, PSYCHOL INTERPERSONA Simmel G, 1955, CONFLICT WEB GROUP A Moreno JL, 1940, SOCIOMETRY, V3, P62, DOI 10.2307/2785546 ARAL S, MANAGEMENT IN PRESS NR 115 TC 1 Z9 1 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD JUL PY 2011 VL 117 IS 1 BP 90 EP 171 PG 82 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 816EP UT WOS:000294581800003 ER PT J AU Cornwell, B Laumann, EO AF Cornwell, Benjamin Laumann, Edward O. TI Network Position and Sexual Dysfunction: Implications of Partner Betweenness for Men SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID ERECTILE DYSFUNCTION; SOCIAL NETWORKS; UNITED-STATES; OLDER-ADULTS; LATER LIFE; FRIENDSHIP NETWORKS; GENDER-DIFFERENCES; PERSONAL NETWORKS; NAME GENERATOR; HEALTH AB This article combines relational perspectives on gender identity with social network structural perspectives on health to understand men's sexual functioning. The authors argue that network positions that afford independence and control over social resources are consistent with traditional masculine roles and may therefore affect men's sexual performance. For example, when a heterosexual man's female partner has more frequent contact with his confidants than he does which the authors refer to as partner betweenness his relational autonomy, privacy, and control are constrained. Analyses of data from the National Social Life, Health, and Aging Project (NSHAP) show that about a quarter of men experience partner betweennessa and that these men are 92% more likely to report erectile dysfunction. Partner betweenness is strongest among the youngest men in the sample, which may reflect changing conceptions of masculinity in later life. The authors consider several explanations for these findings and urge additional research on the links between health, gender, and network structure. C1 [Cornwell, Benjamin] Cornell Univ, Dept Sociol, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA. [Laumann, Edward O.] Univ Chicago, Dept Sociol, Chicago, IL 60637 USA. [Laumann, Edward O.] Univ Chicago, Div Social Sci, Chicago, IL 60637 USA. RP Cornwell, B (reprint author), Cornell Univ, Dept Sociol, 354 Uris Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA EM btc49@cornell.edu CR Cornwell EY, 2009, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V50, P31 Cornwell B, 2009, J AGING HEALTH, V21, P129, DOI 10.1177/0898264308328649 Cornwell B, 2009, SOC NETWORKS, V31, P92, DOI 10.1016/j.socnet.2008.10.005 QATO DM, 2009, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V64, P86 Laumann EO, 2008, J SEX MED, V5, P2300, DOI 10.1111/j.1743-6109.2008.00974.x McCabe MP, 2008, J SEX MED, V5, P1795, DOI 10.1111/j.1743-6109.2008.00878.x Esposito K, 2008, INT J IMPOT RES, V20, P358, DOI 10.1038/ijir.2008.9 Cornwell B, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P185 Sand MS, 2008, J SEX MED, V5, P583, DOI 10.1111/j.1743-6109.2007.00720.x Smith KP, 2008, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V34, P405, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.34.040507.134601 Morgan SL, 2008, SOCIOL METHODOL, V38, P231 McVary KT, 2007, NEW ENGL J MED, V357, P2472, DOI 10.1056/NEJMcp067261 Smith JA, 2007, J AGING STUD, V21, P325, DOI 10.1016/j.jaging.2007.05.004 Mann R, 2007, J AGING STUD, V21, P281, DOI 10.1016/j.jaging.2007.05.008 Ribeiro O, 2007, J AGING STUD, V21, P302, DOI 10.1016/j.jaging.2007.05.005 Christakis NA, 2007, NEW ENGL J MED, V357, P370, DOI 10.1056/NEJMsa066082 Rotolo T, 2007, SOCIOL QUART, V48, P559, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.2007.00089.x Laumann EO, 2007, J SEX MED, V4, P57, DOI 10.1111/j.1743-6109.2006.00340.x Moss SZ, 2007, J AGING STUD, V21, P43, DOI 10.1016/j.jaging.2006.05.001 Krause N, 2007, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V62, pS28 LINDAU ST, 2007, NEW ENGL J MED, V357, P22 Kupelian V, 2006, J UROLOGY, V176, P2584, DOI 10.1016/j.juro.2006.08.020 Corona G, 2006, J ANDROL, V27, P795, DOI 10.2164/jandrol.106.000638 Pinquart M, 2006, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V61, pP33 van Emmerik IIJH, 2006, SOC NETWORKS, V28, P24, DOI 10.1016/j.socnet.2005.04.002 Fiori Katherine L, 2006, J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci, V61, pP25 ADAMS RG, 2006, MEN RELATIONSHIPS NE, P103 LAUMANN EO, 2006, ACHIEVES SEXUAL BEHA, V35, P143, DOI 10.1007/s10508-005-9005-3 Connell RW, 2005, GENDER SOC, V19, P829, DOI 10.1177/0891243205278639 Fernandez RM, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P859, DOI 10.1086/497257 Dean RC, 2005, UROL CLIN N AM, V32, P379, DOI 10.1016/j.ucl.2005.08.007 Martin JL, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P408, DOI 10.1086/432781 DeLamater JD, 2005, J SEX RES, V42, P138 Oliffe J, 2005, SOC SCI MED, V60, P2249, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2004.10.016 Krause N, 2005, J AGING HEALTH, V17, P28, DOI 10.1177/0898264304272782 Bearman P, 2004, SOC FORCES, V83, P535, DOI 10.1353/sof.2005.0001 Ponholzer A, 2004, UROLOGY, V64, P772, DOI 10.1016/j.urology.2004.05.025 Marin A, 2004, SOC NETWORKS, V26, P289, DOI 10.1016/j.socnet.2004.06.001 Kalmijn M, 2003, SOC NETWORKS, V25, P231, DOI 10.1016/S0378-8733(03)00010-8 Youm Y, 2003, RATION SOC, V15, P243, DOI 10.1177/1043463103015002004 Mansfield AK, 2003, INT J MENS HLTH, V2, P93, DOI 10.3149/jmh.0202.93 Braun V., 2003, SEXUALITIES, V6, P237, DOI 10.1177/1363460703006002005 Martino W., 2003, SO WHATS BOY ADDRESS DAVIDSON K, 2003, GENDER AGEING CHANGI, P168 AVISON WR, 2003, PERSONAL CONTROL SOC, P127 Wagner JD, 2002, EVOL HUM BEHAV, V23, P437, DOI 10.1016/S1090-5138(02)00100-9 Riska E, 2002, SOCIOL HEALTH ILL, V24, P347, DOI 10.1111/1467-9566.00298 Lee C, 2002, PSYCHOL MENS HLTH Kalmijn M, 2001, J MARRIAGE FAM, V63, P639, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.00639.x Cattell V, 2001, SOC SCI MED, V52, P1501, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(00)00259-8 Rosen RC, 2001, UROL CLIN N AM, V28, P269, DOI 10.1016/S0094-0143(05)70137-3 Lin N., 2001, SOCIAL CAPITAL THEOR McPherson JM, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P415, DOI DOI 10.1146/ANNUREV.S0C.27.1.415) Renzulli LA, 2000, SOC FORCES, V79, P523, DOI 10.2307/2675508 McGuire GM, 2000, WORK OCCUPATION, V27, P500, DOI 10.1177/0730888400027004004 Berkman LF, 2000, SOC SCI MED, V51, P843, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(00)00065-4 Goldstein I, 2000, AM J CARDIOL, V86, p41F VANMINNEN A, 2000, SEX RELATIONSHIP THE, V15, P47 Stephenson PH, 1999, J AGING STUD, V13, P391, DOI 10.1016/S0890-4065(99)00017-1 Laumann EO, 1999, SEX TRANSM DIS, V26, P250, DOI 10.1097/00007435-199905000-00003 Julien D, 1999, J MARRIAGE FAM, V61, P516, DOI 10.2307/353766 Galliher RV, 1999, SEX ROLES, V40, P689, DOI 10.1023/A:1018804617443 Popielarz PA, 1999, GENDER SOC, V13, P234, DOI 10.1177/089124399013002005 Laumann EO, 1999, JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC, V281, P537, DOI 10.1001/jama.281.6.537 Waldrop D. P., 1999, J AGING IDENTITY, V4, P33, DOI 10.1023/A:1022834825849 Ridgeway CL, 1999, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V25, P191, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.25.1.191 Cheng C, 1999, J MENS STUDIES, V7, P295 Ruan DC, 1998, SOC NETWORKS, V20, P247, DOI 10.1016/S0378-8733(98)00004-5 Burt RS, 1998, RATION SOC, V10, P5, DOI 10.1177/104346398010001001 Pugliesi K, 1998, SEX ROLES, V38, P215, DOI 10.1023/A:1018733116398 MCCABE MP, 1998, SEX MARITAL THER, V3, P131 Ridgeway CL, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P218, DOI 10.2307/2657301 EDGAR D, 1997, MEN MATESHIP MARRIAG Silverstein M, 1996, J MARRIAGE FAM, V58, P970, DOI 10.2307/353984 Duncombe J, 1996, SEXUAL CULTURES, P220 MIROWSKY J, 1995, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V58, P31, DOI 10.2307/2787141 Connell R. W., 1995, MASCULINITIES Thoits PA, 1995, J HLTH SOCIAL BEHAV, V35, P53, DOI 10.2307/2626957 IBARRA H, 1993, ACAD MANAGE REV, V18, P56, DOI 10.2307/258823 Smith-Lovin Lynn, 1993, THEORY GENDER FEMINI, P223 FOREMAN S, 1992, J FAM THER, V14, P349, DOI 10.1046/j..1992.00466.x STEIN CH, 1992, J SOC PERS RELAT, V9, P365, DOI 10.1177/0265407592093003 Burt R.S., 1992, STRUCTURAL HOLES SOC Zilbergeld B., 1992, NEW MALE SEXUALITY STOLLER EP, 1991, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V32, P180, DOI 10.2307/2137151 LEIBLUM SR, 1991, J SEX MARITAL THER, V17, P147 HALE VE, 1990, ARCH SEX BEHAV, V19, P569, DOI 10.1007/BF01542466 WELLMAN B, 1990, AM J SOCIOL, V96, P558, DOI 10.1086/229572 MOORE G, 1990, AM SOCIOL REV, V55, P726, DOI 10.2307/2095868 HOUSE JS, 1988, SCIENCE, V241, P540, DOI 10.1126/science.3399889 UMBERSON D, 1987, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V28, P306, DOI 10.2307/2136848 West C, 1987, GENDER SOC, V1, P125, DOI 10.1177/0891243287001002002 KRACKHARDT D, 1987, SOC NETWORKS, V9, P109, DOI 10.1016/0378-8733(87)90009-8 MARSDEN PV, 1987, AM SOCIOL REV, V52, P122, DOI 10.2307/2095397 Connell R. W., 1987, GENDER POWER SOC PER Kimmel Michael S, 1987, CHANGING MEN NEW DIR FLEISS J L, 1986, Journal of Psychiatric Research, V20, P195, DOI 10.1016/0022-3956(86)90003-8 GERSTEL N, 1985, SOC FORCES, V64, P84, DOI 10.2307/2578973 ROOK KS, 1984, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V46, P1097, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.46.5.1097 ZIGMOND AS, 1983, ACTA PSYCHIAT SCAND, V67, P361, DOI 10.1111/j.1600-0447.1983.tb09716.x MILARDO RM, 1982, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V45, P162, DOI 10.2307/3033649 JOHNSON MP, 1982, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V45, P34, DOI 10.2307/3033672 HECKMAN JJ, 1979, ECONOMETRICA, V47, P153, DOI 10.2307/1912352 FREEMAN LC, 1979, SOC NETWORKS, V1, P215, DOI 10.1016/0378-8733(78)90021-7 SPANIER GB, 1976, J MARRIAGE FAM, V38, P15, DOI 10.2307/350547 PFEIFFER E, 1975, J AM GERIATR SOC, V23, P433 GRANOVET.MS, 1973, AM J SOCIOL, V78, P1360, DOI 10.1086/225469 Masters W.H., 1966, HUMAN SEXUAL RESPONS, p(1966 EMERSON RM, 1962, AM SOCIOL REV, V27, P31, DOI 10.2307/2089716 NR 109 TC 1 Z9 1 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD JUL PY 2011 VL 117 IS 1 BP 172 EP 208 PG 37 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 816EP UT WOS:000294581800004 ER PT J AU Axinn, WG Ghimire, DJ AF Axinn, William G. Ghimire, Dirgha J. TI Social Organization, Population, and Land Use SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID FERTILITY LIMITATION; COMMUNITY CONTEXT; ENVIRONMENTAL SOCIOLOGY; POLICY-ANALYSIS; METABOLIC RIFT; OUT-MIGRATION; 1ST BIRTH; MARRIAGE; NEPAL; BEHAVIOR AB A new approach to investigation of human influences on the environment identifies social organization as an influence independent of population size, affluence, and technology. The framework also identifies population events, such as births, that influence the environment. The authors use longitudinal, multilevel, mixed-method measures of local land use changes, population dynamics, and social organization to test this framework. These tests reveal that changes in social organization are strongly associated with changes in land use independent of measures of population size, affluence, and technology. Also, local birth events shape local land use changes and key proximate determinants of land use change. C1 [Ghimire, Dirgha J.] Univ Michigan, Inst Social Res, Ctr Populat Studies, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 USA. [Axinn, William G.] Univ Michigan, Survey Res Ctr, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 USA. RP Ghimire, DJ (reprint author), Univ Michigan, Inst Social Res, Ctr Populat Studies, 426 Thompson St, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 USA EM nepdjg@umich.edu CR BOHRAMISHRA P, 2011, MIGRATION CLIMATE CH Massey DS, 2010, POPUL ENVIRON, V32, P109, DOI 10.1007/s11111-010-0119-8 Ghimire DJ, 2010, RURAL SOCIOL, V75, P478, DOI 10.1111/j.1549-0831.2010.00019.x Massey DS, 2010, INT MIGR, V48, P1, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-2435.2009.00581.x Axinn WG, 2010, SOC SCI RES, V39, P357, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2010.01.001 PIOTROWSKI M, 2010, INT MIGR, V48, DOI DOI 10.1111/J.1468-2435.2010.00627.X Williams N, 2009, SOC SCI RES, V38, P883, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2009.04.005 Bohra P, 2009, INT MIGR REV, V43, P621, DOI 10.1111/j.1747-7379.2009.00779.x Castro P, 2009, J ENVIRON PSYCHOL, V29, P24, DOI 10.1016/j.jenvp.2008.11.003 BELL M, 2008, INVITATION ENV SOCIO Brauner-Otto SR, 2007, DEMOGRAPHY, V44, P747, DOI 10.1353/dem.2007.0041 Shrestha SS, 2007, POPUL ENVIRON, V29, P25, DOI 10.1007/s11111-007-0059-0 Haustein S, 2007, J APPL SOC PSYCHOL, V37, P1856, DOI 10.1111/j.1559-1816.2007.00241.x Ghimire DJ, 2007, POPUL ENVIRON, V28, P289, DOI 10.1007/s11111-007-0056-3 MACHT C, 2007, 07692 U MICH POP STU Yabiku ST, 2006, POPUL RES POLICY REV, V25, P305, DOI 10.1007/s11113-006-9006-5 Cohen MJ, 2006, FUTURES, V38, P528, DOI 10.1016/j.futures.2005.09.002 Yabiku ST, 2006, POPUL ENVIRON, V27, P445, DOI 10.1007/s11111-006-0030-5 Ghimire DJ, 2006, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P1181, DOI 10.1086/498468 Axinn William G., 2006, MIXED METHOD DATA CO GHIMIRE DJ, 2006, CONTRIBUTIONS NEPALE, V33, P177 Clausen R, 2005, ORGAN ENVIRON, V18, P422, DOI 10.1177/1086026605281187 Yabiku ST, 2005, POP STUD-J DEMOG, V59, P339, DOI 10.1080/00324720500223393 Ghimire DJ, 2005, POPUL ENVIRON, V27, P29, DOI 10.1007/s11111-005-0012-z Moffitt R, 2005, DEMOGRAPHY, V42, P91, DOI 10.1353/dem.2005.0006 Smith C., 2005, SOUL SEARCHING RELIG Moran E, 2005, POPULATION LAND USE, P106 Walsh S. J, 2005, POPULATION LAND USE, P135 BIDDLECOM AE, 2005, POPUL ENVIRON, V26, P183, DOI DOI 10.1007/S11111-005-1874-9 LIU J, 2005, POPULATION LAND USE, P217 FOSTER A, 2005, POPULATION LAND USE, P287 Entwisle B., 2005, POPULATION LAND USE Hoelter LF, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P1131, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00083.x Barber JS, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P1180, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00086.x Yabiku ST, 2004, SOC FORCES, V83, P559, DOI 10.1353/sof.2005.0023 Barber JS, 2004, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V67, P236 Dupont DP, 2004, ECOL ECON, V49, P273, DOI 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2004.01.013 Bhandari P, 2004, POPUL ENVIRON, V25, P475 Foster AD, 2004, ECON DEV CULT CHANGE, V52, P509, DOI 10.1086/420968 DICKENS P, 2004, SOC NATURE CHANGING York R, 2003, ECOL ECON, V46, P351, DOI 10.1016/S0921-8009(03)00188-5 Moffitt R, 2003, POPUL DEV REV, V29, P448, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4457.2003.00448.x Moore JW, 2003, THEOR SOC, V32, P307, DOI 10.1023/A:1024404620759 York R, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P279, DOI 10.2307/1519769 Clark B, 2003, ORGAN ENVIRON, V16, P87, DOI 10.1177/1086026602250258 Fox Jefferson, 2003, PEOPLE ENV APPROACHE FOSTER JB, 2003, NEW IMPERIALIST CHAL, P186 Maples JJ, 2002, BIOMETRICS, V58, P754, DOI 10.1111/j.0006-341X.2002.00754.x Mouw T, 2002, DEMOGRAPHY, V39, P507, DOI 10.2307/3088329 Barber JS, 2002, SOC FORCES, V80, P1369, DOI 10.1353/sof.2002.0019 York R, 2002, SOC SCI QUART, V83, P18, DOI 10.1111/1540-6237.00068 Raudenbush S.W., 2002, HIERARCHICAL LINEAR Evans TP, 2002, POPUL DEV REV, V28, P165 *CENTR BUR STAT, 2002, POP CENS 2001 NAT RE Axinn WG, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P481, DOI 10.2307/3088919 Axinn WG, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P1219, DOI 10.1086/320818 Irwin A., 2001, SOCIOLOGY ENV MULLERBOKER U, 2001, ASPECTS MIGRATION MO, P179 HUNTER LM, 2001, ENV IMPLICATIONS POP ENTWISLE B, 2001, POP ASS AM ANN M WAS GUTMANN MP, 2001, POP ASS AM ANN M WAS MORAN E, 2001, POP ASS AM ANN M WAS ROSENZWEIG M, 2001, POP ASS AM ANN M WAS Tiwari PC, 2000, LAND USE POLICY, V17, P101, DOI 10.1016/S0264-8377(00)00002-8 Heckman JJ, 2000, Q J ECON, V115, P45, DOI 10.1162/003355300554674 Foster J.B., 2000, ORG ENV, V13, P403, DOI 10.1177/1086026600134002 Barber JS, 2000, SOCIOL METHODOL, V30, P201 Teal GA, 2000, SOC NATUR RESOUR, V13, P1, DOI 10.1080/089419200279207 MOORE JW, 2000, ORG ENV, V13, P123, DOI 10.1177/1086026600132001 FOSTER AD, 2000, POPULATION INCOME FO Foster JB, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P366, DOI 10.1086/210315 South SJ, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P113, DOI 10.2307/2657281 Winship C, 1999, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V25, P659, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.25.1.659 Burkett P., 1999, MARX NATURE RED GREE GUTMANN MP, 1999, CL WOOD AGR LECT SER Shivakoti GP, 1999, POPUL ENVIRON, V20, P191, DOI 10.1023/A:1023398907307 Xie Y, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P847, DOI 10.2307/2657505 Fischer-Kowalski M, 1998, INT SOC SCI J, V50, P573, DOI 10.1111/1468-2451.00169 Diekmann A, 1998, RATION SOC, V10, P79, DOI 10.1177/104346398010001004 Liverman Diana., 1998, PEOPLE PIXELS LINKIN GURUNG SB, 1998, CONT NEPAL, P1 Pingali PL, 1997, AM J AGR ECON, V79, P628, DOI 10.2307/1244162 McCalla AF, 1997, AM J AGR ECON, V79, P643, DOI 10.2307/1244164 Heilig GK, 1997, POPUL DEV REV, V23, P139, DOI 10.2307/2137464 Massey DS, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P939, DOI 10.1086/231037 Axinn WG, 1997, SOCIOL METHODOL, V27, P355, DOI 10.1111/1467-9531.271031 Stern PC, 1997, ENV SIGNIFICANT CONS, P1 BARBER J, 1997, NEPAL POPULATION J, V6, P193 Hamilton LC, 1997, POPUL ENVIRON, V18, P283, DOI 10.1007/BF02208424 Perz SG, 1997, POPUL ENVIRON, V18, P301, DOI 10.1007/BF02208425 Bongaarts J, 1996, POPUL DEV REV, V22, P483, DOI 10.2307/2137717 Axinn WG, 1996, RURAL SOCIOL, V61, P249 Sastry N, 1996, DEMOGRAPHY, V33, P211, DOI 10.2307/2061873 Thapa GB, 1996, AGR ECOSYST ENVIRON, V57, P57, DOI 10.1016/0167-8809(96)88021-2 Buttel FH, 1996, RURAL SOCIOL, V61, P56 Rees WE, 1996, POPUL ENVIRON, V17, P195, DOI 10.1007/BF02208489 PINGALI PL, 1995, FOOD POLICY, V20, P171, DOI 10.1016/0306-9192(95)00012-4 MAY JF, 1995, POPUL ENVIRON, V16, P321, DOI 10.1007/BF02208117 STOLZENBERG RM, 1995, AM SOCIOL REV, V60, P84, DOI 10.2307/2096347 Cohen Joel E., 1995, MANY PEOPLE CAN EART SHAPIRO D, 1995, POPUL ENVIRON, V16, P221, DOI 10.1007/BF02331918 Thornton A., 1994, SOCIAL CHANGE FAMILY MASSEY DS, 1994, AM SOCIOL REV, V76, P170 SCHMIDTVOGT D, 1994, EUROPEAN B HIMALAYAN, V7, P18 DERKSEN L, 1993, AM SOCIOL REV, V58, P434, DOI 10.2307/2095910 EHRLICH PR, 1993, POPUL DEV REV, V19, P1, DOI 10.2307/2938383 Wolman MG, 1993, POPULATION LAND USE, P15 DAHAL DR, 1993, ANTHR TIBET HIMALAYA, P49 JOLLY CL, 1993, POPULATION LAND USE MORTIMORE M, 1993, POPULATION LAND USE, P42 THORNTON A, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P628, DOI 10.1086/230051 BONGAARTS J, 1992, POPUL DEV REV, V18, P299, DOI 10.2307/1973681 MARSDEN PV, 1992, SOCIOLOGICAL METHODO FREEDMAN DA, 1991, SOCIOL METHODOL, V21, P291, DOI 10.2307/270939 BILSBORROW RE, 1991, RESOURCES ENV POPULA, P125 MYERS N, 1991, RESOURCES ENV POPULA, P237 Coleman J.S, 1990, FDN SOCIAL THEORY SHRESTHA NR, 1990, LANDLESSNESS MIGRATI HILL AG, 1990, RURAL DEV POPULATION, P168 ENTWISLE B, 1989, AM SOCIOL REV, V54, P1019, DOI 10.2307/2095721 SHRESTHA NR, 1989, ANN ASSOC AM GEOGR, V79, P370, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8306.1989.tb00268.x TULADHAR J, 1989, PERSISTENCE HIGH FER SHIVAKOTI GP, 1989, WINROCK RES REPORT S, V8 Ajzen I, 1988, ATTITUDES PERSONALIT Marini M. M., 1988, SOCIOL METHODOL, V18, P347, DOI 10.2307/271053 Abbott A, 1988, SYSTEM PROFESSIONS E Rindfuss R.R., 1988, 1 BIRTHS AM CHANGES FRICKE T, 1988, HIMALAYAN HOUSEHOLDS RAFTERY AE, 1988, 121 U WASH DEP STAT GOLDSCHEIDER FK, 1987, J MARRIAGE FAM, V49, P507, DOI 10.2307/352196 Blaikie P, 1987, LAND DEGRADATION SOC Thornton A., 1987, SOCIOLOGICAL FORUM, V2, P746, DOI 10.1007/BF01124383 SIMMONS IG, 1987, LAND TRANSFORMATION, P45 *HIS MAJ GOV, 1987, POP MON NEP POKHAREL BN, 1986, WINROCK RURAL POVERT, V1 ENTWISLE B, 1985, AM J SOCIOL, V91, P616, DOI 10.1086/228316 CASTERLINE JB, 1985, COLLECTION ANAL COMM HAMILTON LC, 1985, SOCIOL INQ, V55, P170, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.1985.tb00857.x Durkheim Emile, 1984, DIVISION LABOR SOC HAWLEY AH, 1984, AM J SOCIOL, V89, P904, DOI 10.1086/227949 AXINN NW, 1983, SMALL FARMERS NEPAL MCAULEY WJ, 1982, J MARRIAGE FAM, V44, P301, DOI 10.2307/351540 Boserup E., 1981, POPULATION TECHNOLOG Marx K., 1981, CAPITAL CRITIQUE POL, V3 CONWAY D, 1981, CAUSES CONSEQUENCES BLAIKIE P, 1980, NEPAL CRISIS GROWTH GURUNG HB, 1980, VIGNETTES NEPAL DUNLAP RE, 1979, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V5, P243, DOI 10.1146/annurev.so.05.080179.001331 HECKMAN JJ, 1978, ECONOMETRICA, V46, P931, DOI 10.2307/1909757 Marx Karl, 1976, CAPITAL CRITIQUE POL, V1 Eckholm E., 1976, LOSING GROUND ENV ST Ogburn W.F., 1976, TECHNOLOGY CHANGING ELDER JW, 1976, PLANNED RESETTLEMENT RUBIN DB, 1974, J EDUC PSYCHOL, V66, P688, DOI 10.1037/h0037350 Bista D, 1972, PEOPLE NEPAL GEERTZ C, 1968, AGR INVOLUTION PROCE MIRACLE MP, 1968, AM J AGR ECON, V50, P292, DOI 10.2307/1237543 Campbell D. T., 1967, EXPT QUASIEXPERIMENT Blau P., 1967, AM OCCUPATIONAL STRU Boserup E., 1965, CONDITIONS AGR GROWT Ogburn W.F., 1934, PRINCIPLES SOCIOLOGY, P421 NR 161 TC 1 Z9 1 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD JUL PY 2011 VL 117 IS 1 BP 209 EP 258 PG 50 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 816EP UT WOS:000294581800005 ER PT J AU Cotter, D Hermsen, JM Vanneman, R AF Cotter, David Hermsen, Joan M. Vanneman, Reeve TI The End of the Gender Revolution? Gender Role Attitudes from 1977 to 2008 SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID SEX-ROLE ATTITUDES; UNITED-STATES; PUBLIC-OPINION; FAMILY; WOMEN; GENERATIONS; POLICY; REPLACEMENT; EMPLOYMENT; TRENDS AB After becoming consistently more egalitarian for more than two decades, gender role attitudes in the General Social Survey have changed little since the mid-1990s. This plateau mirrors other gender trends, suggesting a fundamental alteration in the momentum toward gender equality. While cohort replacement can explain about half of the increasing egalitarianism between 1974 and 1994, the changes since the mid-1990s are not well accounted for by cohort differences. Nor is the post-1994 stagnation explained by structural or broad ideological changes in American society. The recent lack of change in gender attitudes is more likely the consequence of the rise of a new cultural frame, an "egalitarian essentialism" that blends aspects of feminist equality and traditional motherhood roles. C1 [Hermsen, Joan M.] Univ Missouri, Dept Sociol, Columbia, MO 65211 USA. [Cotter, David] Union Coll, Schenectady, NY 12308 USA. [Vanneman, Reeve] Univ Maryland, Dept Sociol, College Pk, MD 20742 USA. RP Hermsen, JM (reprint author), Univ Missouri, Dept Sociol, 303A Middlebush Hall, Columbia, MO 65211 USA EM hermsenj@missouri.edu CR Stone P, 2007, OPTING OUT: WHY WOMEN REALLY QUIT CAREERS AND HEAD HOME, P1 Smith Tom W., 2007, GEN SOCIAL SURVEYS 1 Buchmann C, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P515 Goldin C, 2006, AM ECON REV, V96, P1, DOI 10.1257/000282806777212350 Bianchi S. M., 2006, CHANGING RHYTHMS AM Fischer Claude, 2006, CENTURY DIFFERENCE A Bolzendahl C, 2005, SOCIOL QUART, V46, P47 Danziger S., 2005, AM PEOPLE CENSUS 200, P49 Story Louise, 2005, NY TIMES 0920 Peskowitz Miriam, 2005, TRUTH MOMMY WARS WHO BOUSHEY H, 2005, ARE WOMEN OPTING OUT LICHTER DT, 2005, AM PEOPLE CENSUS 200, P169 Brooks C, 2004, SOC SCI RES, V33, P106, DOI 10.1016/S0049-089X(03)00041-3 Peltola P, 2004, GENDER SOC, V18, P122, DOI 10.1177/0891243203259921 Charles M., 2004, OCCUPATIONAL GHETTOS Douglas S. J., 2004, MOMMY MYTH IDEALIZAT Jacobs J. A., 2004, TIME DIVIDE WORK FAM Cotter David, 2004, GENDER INEQUALITY WO Moore LM, 2003, SOC FORCES, V82, P115, DOI 10.1353/sof.2003.0099 Schnittker J, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P607, DOI 10.2307/1519741 Lareau A., 2003, UNEQUAL CHILDHOODS C Blair-Loy M., 2003, COMPETING DEVOTIONS BELKIN L, 2003, NY TIMES MAGAZI 1026 POLLITT K, 2003, NATION 1031 Hout M, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P165, DOI 10.2307/3088891 Thornton A, 2001, J MARRIAGE FAM, V63, P1009, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.01009.x Hout M, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P468, DOI 10.1086/324189 Steensland B, 2000, SOC FORCES, V79, P291, DOI 10.2307/2675572 Brewster KL, 2000, J MARRIAGE FAM, V62, P477, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2000.00477.x Williams J., 2000, UNBENDING GENDER WHY BURSTEIN P, 2000, WORK FAMILY RES INFO, P31 Minkoff DC, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P779, DOI 10.2307/2657360 Burstein P, 1997, SOC FORCES, V76, P135, DOI 10.2307/2580321 Hoffmann JP, 1997, J SCI STUD RELIG, V36, P52, DOI 10.2307/1387882 Cassidy ML, 1996, GENDER SOC, V10, P312, DOI 10.1177/089124396010003007 Hays S., 1996, CULTURAL CONTRADICTI BURSTEIN P, 1995, AM SOCIOL REV, V60, P67, DOI 10.2307/2096346 DAVIS JA, 1992, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V56, P261, DOI 10.1086/269322 Costain Anne N., 1992, INVITING WOMENS REBE PEEK CW, 1991, SOC FORCES, V69, P1205, DOI 10.2307/2579309 Faludi Susan, 1991, BACKLASH UNDECLARED WILCOX C, 1991, INT J PSYCHOL RELIG, V1, P161, DOI 10.1207/s15327582ijpr0103_3 GAMSON WA, 1989, AM J SOCIOL, V95, P1, DOI 10.1086/229213 Mason KO, 1988, GENDER SOC, V2, P39, DOI 10.1177/089124388002001004 TALLICHET SE, 1986, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V49, P219, DOI 10.2307/2786804 CHERLIN A, 1981, AM SOCIOL REV, V46, P453, DOI 10.2307/2095264 THORNTON A, 1979, AM SOCIOL REV, V44, P831, DOI 10.2307/2094530 MASON KO, 1976, AM SOCIOL REV, V41, P573, DOI 10.2307/2094837 FERREE MM, 1974, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V38, P390, DOI 10.1086/268175 SCHUMAN H, 1972, AM J SOCIOL, V78, P513, DOI 10.1086/225362 MODIGLIA.A, 1972, AM POLIT SCI REV, V66, P960, DOI 10.2307/1957488 Friedan B., 1963, FEMININE MYSTIQUE NR 52 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD JUL PY 2011 VL 117 IS 1 BP 259 EP 289 PG 31 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 816EP UT WOS:000294581800006 ER PT J AU Rao, H Yue, LQ Ingram, P AF Rao, Hayagreeva Yue, Lori Qingyuan Ingram, Paul TI Laws of Attraction: Regulatory Arbitrage in the Face of Activism in Right-to-Work States SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE regulatory arbitrage; Walmart; protest; economic sociology ID POLITICAL MEDIATION MODEL; OLD-AGE POLICY; SOCIAL-MOVEMENTS; UNITED-STATES; OPPORTUNITIES; DETERMINANTS; ORGANIZATIONS; MANAGEMENT; PROTESTS; BEHAVIOR AB Past research recognizes that firms exploit regulatory variations to their advantage but depicts such regulatory arbitrage as a dyadic process between firms and regulators. We extend this account by including a firm's non-market rivals and suggest that firms view regulatory differences as part of a corporate political opportunity structure and exploit regulatory variations to disadvantage their rivals. Empirically, we focus on variations in right-to-work (RTW) laws that signal the pro-business climate in a state; these laws exist in 22 U.S. states. Using a spatial-regression discontinuity design, we analyze how Walmart locates new stores in the face of anti-Walmart activists and exploits regulatory discontinuities on the borders between RTW and non-RTW states. We find that Walmart is more likely to propose new stores, and to open those stores even if they are protested, at the borders of RTW states, compared with the borders of neighboring non-RTW states. We conclude with a discussion of implications for the study of regulation, social movements, and organizations. C1 [Rao, Hayagreeva] Stanford Univ, Grad Sch Business, Stanford, CA 94305 USA. [Yue, Lori Qingyuan] Univ So Calif, Marshall Sch Business, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA. [Ingram, Paul] Columbia Univ, Grad Sch Business, New York, NY 10027 USA. RP Rao, H (reprint author), Stanford Univ, Grad Sch Business, 518 Mem Way, Stanford, CA 94305 USA EM Rao_Hayagreeva@GSB.Stanford.Edu CR Ingram P, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V116, P53 King BG, 2010, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V36, P249, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.012809.102606 *CHIEFEXECUTIVE, 2010, BEST WORST STAT BUS KENNY J, 2010, NEW AM Weber K, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P106 Dobbin F, 2009, INVENTING EQUAL OPPORTUNITY, P1 Soule S.A., 2009, CONTENTION CORPORATE Lichtenstein N., 2009, RETAIL REVOLUTION WA MOORE CT, 2009, ANN C AM EV ASS ORL KING BG, 2009, CONTEXTS, V8, P34 CARRUTHERS B, 2009, REGULATORY RACES EFF STEVANS LK, 2009, REV LAW EC, V5, P595 HOLMES TJ, 2009, 13783 NAT BUR EC RES Carbo-Valverde S, 2008, J FINANC SERV RES, V34, P151, DOI 10.1007/s10693-008-0032-9 Ferguson JP, 2008, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V62, P3 King BG, 2008, ADMIN SCI QUART, V53, P395, DOI 10.2189/asqu.53.3.395 Walker ET, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P35, DOI 10.1086/588737 Oliver C, 2008, ACAD MANAGE REV, V33, P496 Imbens GW, 2008, J ECONOMETRICS, V142, P615, DOI 10.1016/j.jeconom.2007.05.001 Schneiberg M, 2008, ANNU REV LAW SOC SCI, V4, P31, DOI 10.1146/annurev.lawsocsci.4.110707.172338 DUBE A, 2008, IIWPS12505 IRLE WP U MATTERA P, 2008, SKIMMING SALES TAX W Baron DP, 2007, J ECON MANAGE STRAT, V16, P599, DOI 10.1111/j.1530-9134.2007.00152.x King BG, 2007, ADMIN SCI QUART, V52, P413 Wallace M, 2007, SOCIOL QUART, V48, P769, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.2007.00100.x Azoulay P, 2007, J ECON BEHAV ORGAN, V63, P599, DOI 10.1016/j.jebo.2006.05.015 Hannan M. T., 2007, LOGICS ORG THEORY Jenkins JC, 2006, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P1122, DOI 10.1086/498467 Amenta Edwin, 2006, MOVEMENTS MATTER TOW Basker E, 2005, J URBAN ECON, V58, P203, DOI 10.1016/j.jue.2005.03.005 Amenta E, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P516 HAUSMAN JA, 2005, 11809 NAT BUR EC RES AMENTA E, 2005, ROUTING OPPOSITION S, P29 Koopmans R, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P198, DOI 10.1086/386271 Murphy D, 2004, STRUCTURE REGULATORY Meyer DS, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P125, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.30.012703.110545 GREER S, 2004, REAL EARNINGS REMAIN Simons T, 2003, ADMIN SCI QUART, V48, P592, DOI 10.2307/3556638 Bebchuk LA, 2003, J LAW ECON, V46, P383, DOI 10.1086/378574 MCADAM D, 2003, DYNAMICS CONTENTION REED R, 2003, J LABOR RES, V24, P713 Hacker JS, 2002, POLIT SOC, V30, P277, DOI 10.1177/0032329202030002004 Shadish W. R., 2002, EXPT QUASIEXPERIMENT Schneiberg M, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P101, DOI 10.1086/323574 Drezner DanielW, 2001, INT STUDIES REV, V3, P53, DOI 10.1111/1521-9488.00225 Fligstein N, 2001, ARCHITECTURE MARKETS Robins JM, 2000, EPIDEMIOLOGY, V11, P550, DOI 10.1097/00001648-200009000-00011 ABRAHAM SE, 2000, EMPLOYMENT RIGHTS EM, V4, P341 COWIE J, 1999, CAPITAL MOVES Holmes TJ, 1998, J POLIT ECON, V106, P667, DOI 10.1086/250026 Moore WJ, 1998, J LABOR RES, V19, P445, DOI 10.1007/s12122-998-1041-z Giugni MG, 1998, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V24, P371, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.24.1.371 Simons T, 1997, ADMIN SCI QUART, V42, P784, DOI 10.2307/2393657 Edelman LB, 1997, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V23, P479, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.479 STONE KE, 1997, IMPACT WALMART PHENO Strange S., 1996, RETREAT STATE AMENTA E, 1994, AM SOCIOL REV, V59, P678, DOI 10.2307/2096443 DAVIS JC, 1993, ECON INQ, V31, P52 AMENTA E, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P308, DOI 10.1086/230010 McAdam D., 1988, HDB SOCIOLOGY, P695 ELLWOOD DT, 1987, J POLIT ECON, V95, P250, DOI 10.1086/261454 MOORE WJ, 1985, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V38, P571, DOI 10.2307/2523992 DIMAGGIO PJ, 1983, AM SOCIOL REV, V48, P147, DOI 10.2307/2095101 WHITE FN, 1983, REGULATION REFORM AM Chandler A., 1977, VISIBLE HAND Thompson J. D., 1967, ORG ACTION SOCIAL SC TIEBOUT CM, 1956, J POLIT ECON, V64, P416, DOI 10.1086/257839 NR 67 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD JUN PY 2011 VL 76 IS 3 BP 365 EP 385 DI 10.1177/0003122411409698 PG 21 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 769SD UT WOS:000291037700001 ER PT J AU Dobbin, F Kim, S Kalev, A AF Dobbin, Frank Kim, Soohan Kalev, Alexandra TI You Can't Always Get What You Need: Organizational Determinants of Diversity Programs SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE diversity management; stratification; institutionalization; corporate culture; power ID CIVIL-RIGHTS LAW; AFFIRMATIVE-ACTION; FORMAL-STRUCTURE; LABOR-MARKETS; IRON CAGE; CONSTRUCTION; DISCRIMINATION; TRANSFORMATION; UNCERTAINTY; OPPORTUNITY AB While some U.S. corporations have adopted a host of diversity management programs, many have done little or nothing. We explore the forces promoting six diversity programs in a national sample of 816 firms over 23 years. Institutional theory suggests that external pressure for innovation reinforces internal advocacy. We argue that external pressure and internal advocacy serve as alternatives, such that when external pressure is already high, increases in internal advocacy will not alter the likelihood of program adoption. Moreover, institutional theory points to functional need as a driver of innovation. We argue that in the case of innovations designed to achieve new societal goals, functional need, as defined in this case by the absence of workforce diversity or the presence of regulatory oversight, is less important than corporate culture. Our findings help explain the spotty coverage of diversity programs. Firms that lack workforce diversity are no more likely than others to adopt programs, but firms with large contingents of women managers are more likely to do so. Pro-diversity industry and corporate cultures promote diversity programs. The findings carry implications for public policy. C1 [Dobbin, Frank] Harvard Univ, Dept Sociol, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA. [Kalev, Alexandra] Tel Aviv Univ, Tel Aviv, Israel. RP Dobbin, F (reprint author), Harvard Univ, Dept Sociol, William James Hall, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA EM frank_dobbin@harvard.edu CR Dobbin F, 2009, INVENTING EQUAL OPPORTUNITY, P1 FRANKEL B, 2009, DIVERSITY INC SEP, P15 KURTULUS FA, 2009, SO SOC SOC NEW ORL L Skaggs S, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P1148, DOI 10.1086/522808 Cohen PN, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P681 Kim TY, 2007, ADMIN SCI QUART, V52, P286 Willon Phil, 2011, HARVARD J LAW GENDER, pAA1 Dobbin F, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V112, P1203, DOI 10.1086/508788 Kalev A, 2006, LAW SOCIAL INQUIRY, V31, P855 Kalev A, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P589 Kang J, 2006, CALIF LAW REV, V94, P1063 VOGUS TJ, 2005, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS ORG, P96, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511791000.007 STRANG D, 2005, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS ORG, P280, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511791000.015 Kelly EL, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P606, DOI 10.1086/379631 MARTIN J, 2002, ED J DEWEY BIOGRAPHY Baron JN, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P960, DOI 10.1086/320296 DEITCH CH, 2001, WORKING FAMILIES TRA, P103 Haveman HA, 2000, CONTEMP SOCIOL, V29, P476, DOI 10.2307/2653935 Osterman P, 2000, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V53, P179, DOI 10.2307/2696072 KELLY EA, 2000, THESIS PRINCETON U P Kelly E, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P455, DOI 10.1086/210317 Baron JN, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P527, DOI 10.2307/2657254 Zuckerman EW, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V104, P1398, DOI 10.1086/210178 Edelman LB, 1999, RES SOC STR, V17, P107 Cohen LE, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P711, DOI 10.2307/2657335 Sutton JR, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P794, DOI 10.2307/2096454 Anderson BE, 1996, AM ECON REV, V86, P298 Steeh C, 1996, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V60, P128, DOI 10.1086/297742 Kalleberg AL, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P47, DOI 10.2307/2096406 Baron J.N., 1996, IND CORP CHANGE, V5, P239 Kalleberg A. L., 1996, ORG AM ANAL THEIR ST Allison P.D, 1995, SURVIVAL ANAL USING ELY RJ, 1994, ADMIN SCI QUART, V39, P203, DOI 10.2307/2393234 OSTERMAN P, 1994, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V47, P173, DOI 10.2307/2524415 Dobbin F., 1994, FORGING IND POLICY U HAVEMAN HA, 1993, ADMIN SCI QUART, V38, P593, DOI 10.2307/2393338 DOBBIN F, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V99, P396, DOI 10.1086/230269 BOBO L, 1993, AM SOCIOL REV, V58, P443, DOI 10.2307/2096070 BURNS LR, 1993, ACAD MANAGE J, V36, P106, DOI 10.2307/256514 DOBBIN FR, 1993, THEOR SOC, V22, P1, DOI 10.1007/BF00993447 EDELMAN LB, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V97, P1531, DOI 10.1086/229939 THOMAS RR, 1991, RACE GENDER UNLEASHI LEONARD JS, 1990, J ECON PERSPECT, V4, P47 EDELMAN LB, 1990, AM J SOCIOL, V95, P1401, DOI 10.1086/229459 Fligstein N., 1990, TRANSFORMATION CORPO GRAHAM HD, 1990, CIVIL RIGHTS ERA ORI Hannani M., 1989, ORG ECOLOGY ARELLANO M, 1987, OXFORD B ECON STAT, V49, P431 FLIGSTEIN N, 1987, AM SOCIOL REV, V52, P44, DOI 10.2307/2095391 SMITH JP, 1984, J LABOR ECON, V2, P269, DOI 10.1086/298034 TOLBERT PS, 1983, ADMIN SCI QUART, V28, P22, DOI 10.2307/2392383 Scott W.R., 1983, ORG ENV RITUAL RATIO, P129 Kalbfleisch JD, 1980, STAT ANAL FAILURE TI Pfeffer J., 1978, EXTERNAL CONTROL ORG MEYER JW, 1977, AM J SOCIOL, V83, P340, DOI 10.1086/226550 Kanter R. M., 1977, MEN WOMEN CORPORATIO Blau P. M., 1971, STRUCTURE ORG Stinchcombe A., 1965, HDB ORG, P142 Selznick Philip, 1957, LEADERSHIP ADM SOCIO *EEOC, INSTR STAND FORM 100 NR 60 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD JUN PY 2011 VL 76 IS 3 BP 386 EP 411 DI 10.1177/0003122411409704 PG 26 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 769SD UT WOS:000291037700002 ER PT J AU Bailey, AK Tolnay, SE Beck, EM Laird, JD AF Bailey, Amy Kate Tolnay, Stewart E. Beck, E. M. Laird, Jennifer D. TI Targeting Lynch Victims: Social Marginality or Status Transgressions? SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE lynching; victimization; race; victim characteristics ID POWER-THREAT HYPOTHESIS; RACIAL VIOLENCE; NORTH-CAROLINA; MOB VIOLENCE; DEEP SOUTH; BLACK; MIGRATION; POPULATION; GEORGIA; CENSUS AB This article presents the first evidence based on a newly-compiled database of known lynch victims. Using information from the original census enumerators' manuscripts, we identify individual- and household-level characteristics of more than 900 black males lynched in 10 southern states between 1882 and 1929. First, we use the information for successfully linked cases to present a profile of individual- and household-level characteristics of a large sample of lynch victims. Second, we compare these characteristics with a randomly-generated sample of black men living in the counties where lynchings occurred. We use our findings from this comparative analysis to assess the empirical support for alternative theoretical perspectives on the selection of individuals as victims of southern mob violence. Third, we consider whether the individual-level risk factors for being targeted as a lynch victim varied substantially over time or across space. Our results demonstrate that victims were generally less embedded within the social and economic fabric of their communities than were other black men. This suggests that social marginality increased the likelihood of being targeted for lynching. These findings are generally consistent across decades and within different sociodemographic contexts. C1 [Bailey, Amy Kate] Utah State Univ, Dept Sociol Social Work & Anthropol, Logan, UT 84322 USA. [Laird, Jennifer D.] Univ Washington, Dept Sociol, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. [Beck, E. M.] Univ Georgia, Athens, GA 30602 USA. RP Bailey, AK (reprint author), Utah State Univ, Dept Sociol Social Work & Anthropol, 0730 Old Main Hill, Logan, UT 84322 USA EM amy.bailey@usu.edu CR Wilkerson I., 2010, WARMTH OTHER SUNS EP GULLICKSON A, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V16, P187 Bailey AK, 2008, HIST METHOD, V41, P47, DOI 10.3200/HMTS.41.1.47-64 Lampinen TM, 2008, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V98, P1028, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.2007.122705 Ruggles S., 2008, INTEGRATED PUBLIC US PRICE GN, 2008, J SOCIOECONOMICS, V37, P167, DOI 10.1016/j.socec.2007.06.001 Lyons CJ, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P815, DOI 10.1086/521846 NEVELS CS, 2007, LYNCHING BELONG CLAI Vandiver Margaret, 2006, LETHAL PUNISHMENT LY Loewen James W., 2005, SUNDOWN TOWNS HIDDEN HARLOW CW, 2005, HATE CRIME REPORTED Messner SF, 2004, CRIMINOLOGY, V42, P585, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2004.tb00530.x Lauritsen JL, 2004, CRIMINOLOGY, V42, P323, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2004.tb00522.x Carrigan William D, 2004, MAKING LYNCHING CULT Pfeifer Michael, 2004, ROUGH JUSTICE LYNCHI Berends Kurt O., 2004, RELIG AM S PROTESTAN, P99 Beck E. M, 2004, CONFIRMED INVENTORY Dray Philip, 2003, HANDS PERSONS UNKNOW WEXLER L, 2003, FIRE CANEBRAKE LAST Beck EM, 2002, HIST METHOD, V35, P77 de la Roche RS, 2001, SOCIOL THEOR, V19, P126, DOI 10.1111/0735-2751.00133 Stovel K, 2001, SOC FORCES, V79, P843, DOI 10.1353/sof.2001.0026 Horowitz DonaldL, 2001, DEADLY ETHNIC RIOT Oliver William, 2001, J HUMAN BEHAV SOCIAL, V4, P1, DOI 10.1300/J137v04n02_01 Perloff RM, 2000, J BLACK STUD, V30, P315 Tolnay Stewart E., 1999, BOTTOM RUNG AFRICAN Wasserman Ira M, 1998, MICHIGAN SOCIOLOGICA, V12, P68 ROSENWAIKE ME, 1998, HIST METHOD, V31, P65 Senechal de la Roche Roberta, 1997, SENTENCE DEATH LYNCH, P48 DYER TG, 1997, SENTENCE DEATH LYNCH, P81 CASHIN J, 1997, SENTENCE DEATH LYNCH, P109 Brundage W. Fitzhugh, 1997, SENTENCE DEATH LYNCH Tolnay SE, 1996, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P788, DOI 10.1086/230997 Ferrie JP, 1996, HIST METHOD, V29, P141 delaRoche RS, 1996, SOCIOL FORUM, V11, P97 Tolnay Stewart E., 1995, FESTIVAL VIOLENCE AN GRIFFIN LJ, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1094, DOI 10.1086/230140 Brundage W. Fitzhugh, 1993, LYNCHING NEW S GEORG SOULE SA, 1992, SOC FORCES, V71, P431, DOI 10.2307/2580018 TOLNAY SE, 1992, AM SOCIOL REV, V57, P103, DOI 10.2307/2096147 DOWNEY DB, 1991, NO CROOKED DEATH COA OLZAK S, 1990, SOC FORCES, V69, P395, DOI 10.2307/2579665 BECK EM, 1990, AM SOCIOL REV, V55, P526, DOI 10.2307/2095805 Wright George C., 1990, RACIAL VIOLENCE KENT TOLNAY SE, 1989, SOC FORCES, V67, P605, DOI 10.2307/2579531 BECK EM, 1989, LAW SOC REV, V23, P317, DOI 10.2307/3053720 CORZINE J, 1988, SOCIOL INQ, V58, P261, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.1988.tb01061.x STECKEL RH, 1988, HIST METHOD, V21, P52 Shapiro H., 1988, WHITE VIOLENCE BLACK GUEST AM, 1987, HIST METHOD, V20, P63 PHILLIPS CD, 1987, LAW SOC REV, V21, P361, DOI 10.2307/3053375 Smead Howard, 1986, BLOOD JUSTICE LYNCHI CORZINE J, 1983, SOC FORCES, V61, P774, DOI 10.2307/2578134 James R.McGovern, 1982, ANATOMY LYNCHING KIL HIRSCHI T, 1977, SOCIOL INQ, V47, P322, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.1977.tb00804.x Ransom Roger L., 1977, ONE KIND FREEDOM EC Black Donald, 1976, BEHAV LAW Kousser J. Morgan, 1974, SHAPING SO POLITICS COALE AJ, 1973, POPUL INDEX, V39, P3, DOI 10.2307/2733759 REED JS, 1972, SOC FORCES, V50, P356, DOI 10.2307/2577039 Hirschi T, 1969, CAUSES DELINQUENCY White W., 1969, ROPE FAGGOT BIOGRAPH Raper Arthur F, 1933, TRAGEDY LYNCHING DINNERSTEIN L, 1968, L FRANK CASE Woodward C. V., 1966, STRANGE CAREER J CRO AMES JD, 1942, CHANGING CHARACTER L Hovland CI, 1940, J PSYCHOL, V9, P301 Ames JD, 1938, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V2, P77, DOI 10.1086/265154 GORDON A, 1937, GEORGIA NEGRO HIST Bailey Thomas Pearce, 1914, RACE ORTHODOXY S OTH 1903, COMMERCIAL APPEAL, P2 1892, TIMES DEMOCRAT 0328, P6 NR 72 TC 1 Z9 1 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD JUN PY 2011 VL 76 IS 3 BP 412 EP 436 DI 10.1177/0003122411407736 PG 25 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 769SD UT WOS:000291037700003 ER PT J AU Polillo, S AF Polillo, Simone TI Money, Moral Authority, and the Politics of Creditworthiness SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE money and banking; creditworthiness; conflict; postbellum United States history ID ECONOMIC SOCIOLOGY; SOCIAL-STRUCTURE; MARKETS; STATE; EMBEDDEDNESS; BANKING; TRUST; UNCERTAINTY; COMMITMENT; AMERICA AB This article moves beyond current controversies on the nature of money by suggesting that a general social process allows different kinds of organizations and networks-from states to banks to local communities-to produce currencies: that is, the articulation of criteria of creditworthiness, or what I call the exercise of moral authority. Bankers specialize in moral authority, but when that authority is contested, challenging groups must articulate alternative criteria of creditworthiness for their currencies to become stable and acceptable. I illustrate these processes with historical material from the postbellum United States, which I use to discuss why the federal government failed to create a stable financial system, and why local bankers engaged in a process of financial innovation that further destabilized money. I conclude with reflections on the shifting structural sources of moral authority, which have made the local level a springboard for destabilizing financial innovations. C1 Univ Virginia, Dept Sociol, Charlottesville, VA 22903 USA. RP Polillo, S (reprint author), Univ Virginia, Dept Sociol, 559 Cabell Hall,POB 400766, Charlottesville, VA 22903 USA EM Sp4ft@virginia.edu CR SCHUMPETER J, 2011, THEORY EC DEV Rugh JS, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P629, DOI 10.1177/0003122410380868 Lounsbury M., 2010, MARKETS TRIAL EC SOC Sassen S, 2010, GLOBALIZATIONS, V7, P23, DOI 10.1080/14747731003593091 CARRUTHERS BG, 2010, MONEY CREDIT SOCIOLO ZELIZER V, 2010, EC LIVES CULTURE SHA SCHWARTZ H, 2009, SUBPRIME NATION DAVIS Gerald F., 2009, MANAGED MARKETS BRUNER RF, 2009, PANIC 1907 LESSONS L Langley P., 2008, EVERYDAY LIFE GLOBAL Ferguson N, 2008, ASCENT MONEY Bryan D, 2007, ECON SOC, V36, P134, DOI 10.1080/03085140601089861 Krippner GR, 2007, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V33, P219, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.33.040406.131647 Dodd N, 2007, ARCH EUR SOCIOL, V48, P273 Knodell J, 2006, J ECON HIST, V66, P541 Maurer B, 2006, ANNU REV ANTHROPOL, V35, P15, DOI 10.1146/annurev.anthro.35.081705.123127 Seabrooke L., 2006, SOCIAL SOURCES FINAN ZELIZER V, 2006, PSYCHOL LEARN MOTIV, P1 VANDERLIP F, 2006, COMMUNICA UNPUB 0323 DODD N, 2006, EUR J SOCIOL, V46, P387 Polillo S, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P1764, DOI 10.1086/428685 Tilly C., 2005, TRUST RULE BORDO MD, 2005, OTHER PEOPLES MONEY, P122 ZELIZER VA, 2005, EC SOCIOLOGY CAPITAL, P289 Tilly C, 2004, THEOR SOC, V33, P1, DOI 10.1023/B:RYSO.0000021427.13188.26 Ingham G, 2004, NATURE MONEY Mahoney J., 2003, COMP HIST ANAL SOCIA Gorski P. S, 2003, DISCIPLINARY REVOLUT Helleiner E, 2003, MAKING NATL MONEY TE Stasavage D, 2002, J LAW ECON ORGAN, V18, P155, DOI 10.1093/jleo/18.1.155 Centeno Miguel Angel, 2002, BLOOD DEBT WAR NATIO Douglas M, 2002, PURITY DANGER ANAL C Krippner GR, 2001, THEOR SOC, V30, P775, DOI 10.1023/A:1013330324198 Guseva A, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P623, DOI 10.2307/3088951 Ingham G, 2001, ECON SOC, V30, P304, DOI 10.1080/03085140120071215 Bell S, 2001, CAMBRIDGE J ECON, V25, P149, DOI 10.1093/cje/25.2.149 Migdal Joel S., 2001, STATE SOC STUDYING S ABBOTT A, 2001, TIME MATTERS OCONNOR J, 2001, FISCAL CRISIS STATE Wallis JJ, 2000, J ECON PERSPECT, V14, P61, DOI 10.1257/jep.14.1.61 Bell S, 2000, J ECON ISSUES, V34, P603 Fine B, 2000, ECON SOC, V29, P357 Zelizer V, 2000, ECON SOC, V29, P383, DOI 10.1080/03085140050084570 Collins R, 2000, SOCIOL THEOR, V18, P17, DOI 10.1111/0735-2751.00086 Allen F., 2000, COMP FINANCIAL SYSTE Aglietta Michel, 2000, THEORY CAPITALIST RE Bodenhorn Howard, 2000, HIST BANKING ANTEBEL HERRIGEL G, 2000, IND CONSTRUCTIONS SO SMITHIN JN, 2000, WHAT IS MONEY Carruthers BG, 1999, THEOR SOC, V28, P353, DOI 10.1023/A:1006903103304 Ingham G, 1999, BRIT J SOCIOL, V50, P76, DOI 10.1080/000713199358824 Collins Randall, 1999, MACROHISTORY ESSAYS Steinmetz G., 1999, STATE CULTURE STATE SYLLA R, 1999, STATE FINANCIAL SYST WRAY LR, 1999, UNDERSTANDING MODERN Carruthers BG, 1998, AM BEHAV SCI, V41, P1384, DOI 10.1177/0002764298041010003 Tilly C, 1998, DURABLE INEQUALITY Muldrew C., 1998, EC OBLIGATION CULTUR Goodhart CAE, 1998, EUROPEAN J POLITICAL, V14, P407, DOI 10.1016/S0176-2680(98)00015-9 Haveman HA, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P1606, DOI 10.1086/231128 Ertman Thomas, 1997, BIRTH LEVIATHAN BUIL Broz J.L., 1997, INT ORIGINS FEDERAL Hobson JM, 1997, WEALTH STATES Ritter Gretchen, 1997, GOLDBUGS GREENBACKS Ingham G, 1996, REV SOC ECON, V54, P507 Stearns LB, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P699, DOI 10.2307/2096400 Carruthers BG, 1996, AM J SOCIOL, V101, P1556, DOI 10.1086/230867 Porter T M, 1996, TRUST NUMBERS PURSUI Eichengreen Barry, 1996, GLOBALIZING CAPITAL Abolafia M. Y., 1996, MAKING MARKETS OPPOR Carruthers Bruce G., 1996, CITY CAPITAL POLITIC COLLINS R, 1995, SOCIETY, V33, P72 Evans P., 1995, EMBEDDED AUTONOMY ST Durkheim E, 1995, ELEMENTARY FORMS REL CALOMIRIS CW, 1995, NBER CONF R, P257 Schumpeter J., 1994, HIST EC ANAL SMITHIN J, 1994, CONTROVERSIES MONETA ZELIZER VIVIANA A., 1994, SOCIAL MEANING MONEY Lamoreaux NaomiR, 1994, INSIDER LENDING BANK Williamson O. E, 1994, HDB EC SOCIOLOGY, P77 Shefter Martin, 1994, POLITICAL PARTIES ST SINCLAIR TJ, 1994, REV INT POLIT ECON, V1, P133 SELLERS C, 1994, MARKET REVOLUTION CARRUTHERS BG, 1994, SOC THEORY, V12, P19, DOI 10.2307/202033 Mann Michael, 1993, SOURCES SOCIAL POWER, V2 CAMPBELL JL, 1993, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V19, P163, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.19.1.163 TIMBERLAKE RH, 1993, MONETARY POLICY US Tilly Charles, 1992, COERCION CAPITAL EUR Vaughan D., 1992, WHAT IS CASE EXPLORI, P173 Grant James, 1992, MONEY MIND BORROWING Powell W.P., 1991, NEW I ORG ANAL BAILEY F, 1991, J BOND REVOLUTION M Simmel Georg, 1990, PHILOS MONEY Fligstein N., 1990, TRANSFORMATION CORPO Bensel Richard Franklin, 1990, YANKEE LEVIATHAN ORI NORTH DC, 1989, J ECON HIST, V49, P803 ABOLAFIA MY, 1988, ADMIN SCI QUART, V33, P177, DOI 10.2307/2393054 DiMaggio P., 1988, I PATTERNS ORG CULTU, P3 Moore B.J., 1988, HORIZONTALISTS VERTI Goodhart Charles, 1988, EVOLUTION CENTRAL BA SAVAGE JD, 1988, BALANCED BUDGETS AM SHAPIRO SP, 1987, AM J SOCIOL, V93, P623, DOI 10.1086/228791 Frieden Jeffry A., 1987, BANKING WORLD POLITI SKLAR M, 1987, CORPORATE RECONSTRUC Douglas M., 1986, I THINK Minsky H., 1986, STABILIZING UNSTABLE Livingston James, 1986, ORIGINS FEDERAL RESE GRANOVETTER M, 1985, AM J SOCIOL, V91, P481, DOI 10.1086/228311 DIAMOND DW, 1984, REV ECON STUD, V51, P393, DOI 10.2307/2297430 ROLNICK AJ, 1984, J MONETARY ECON, V14, P267, DOI 10.1016/0304-3932(84)90044-8 Ingham G.K., 1984, CAPITALISM DIVIDED C White Eugene N., 1983, REGULATION REFORM AM ZYSMAN J, 1983, GVT MARKETS GROWTH F Skowronek S., 1982, BUILDING NEW AM STAT SYLLA R, 1982, J ECON HIST, V42, P21 STIGLITZ JE, 1981, AM ECON REV, V71, P393 COLLINS R, 1981, AM J SOCIOL, V86, P984, DOI 10.1086/227351 GOODWYN L, 1978, POPULIST MOMENT SHOR James John A, 1978, MONEY CAPITAL MARKET Braudel Fernarid, 1977, AFTERTHOUGHTS MAT CI SMITH ADAM, 1976, WEALTH NATIONS JONES RA, 1976, J POLIT ECON, V84, P757, DOI 10.1086/260475 JAMES JA, 1976, J ECON HIST, V36, P878 Rockoff Hugh, 1974, J MONEY CREDIT BANK, V6, P141, DOI 10.2307/1991023 FORMISAN.RP, 1974, AM POLIT SCI REV, V68, P473, DOI 10.2307/1959497 WILLIAMS.JG, 1974, J ECON HIST, V34, P636 AKERLOF GA, 1970, Q J ECON, V84, P488, DOI 10.2307/1879431 Hicks J, 1969, THEORY EC HIST Goodhart C.A.E., 1969, NEW YORK MONEY MARKE SYLLA R, 1969, J ECON HIST, V29, P657 Unger Irwin, 1964, GREENBACK ERA SOCIAL WHITE LD, 1963, REPUBLICAN ERA 1869 Gerschenkron A., 1962, EC BACKWARDNESS HIST Hammond Bray, 1957, BANKS POLITICS AM RE NUSSBAUM A, 1957, HIST DOLLAR Lerner AP, 1947, AM ECON REV, V37, P312 Schumpeter J.A., 1939, BUSINESS CYCLES THEO SMITH VC, 1936, RATIONALE CENTRAL BA KEYNES J.M., 1930, TREATISE MONEY, V5 and 6 Knapp GeorgFrieclrich, 1924, STATE THEORY MONEY Bagehot Walter, 1920, LOMBARD STREET DESCR Innes A.Mitchell, 1914, BANKING LAW J, V31, P151 Innes A.Mitchell, 1913, BANKING LAW J, V30, P377 Menger C., 1892, ECON J, V2, P239 NR 144 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD JUN PY 2011 VL 76 IS 3 BP 437 EP 464 DI 10.1177/0003122411407737 PG 28 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 769SD UT WOS:000291037700004 ER PT J AU Williams, K Sassler, S Frech, A Addo, F Cooksey, E AF Williams, Kristi Sassler, Sharon Frech, Adrianne Addo, Fenaba Cooksey, Elizabeth TI Nonmarital Childbearing, Union History, and Women's Health at Midlife SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE nonmarital fertility; marital status; cohabitation; health; single mothers ID FAMILY-STRUCTURE; UNWED MOTHERS; FRAGILE FAMILIES; LIFE-COURSE; PSYCHOLOGICAL DISTRESS; SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; ETHNIC-DIFFERENCES; SOCIAL CONDITIONS; PROPENSITY SCORE; MARRIED MOTHERS AB Despite high rates of nonmarital childbearing in the United States, little is known about the health of women who have nonmarital births. We use data from the NLSY79 to examine differences in age 40 self-assessed health between women who had a premarital birth and those whose first birth occurred within marriage. We then differentiate women with a premarital first birth according to their subsequent union histories and estimate the effect of marrying or cohabiting versus remaining never-married on midlife self-assessed health. We pay particular attention to the paternity status of a mother's partner and the stability of marital unions. To partially address selection bias, we employ multivariate propensity score techniques. Results suggest that premarital childbearing is negatively associated with midlife health for white and black women, but not for Hispanic women. We find no evidence that the negative health consequences of nonmarital childbearing are mitigated by either marriage or cohabitation for black women. For other women, only enduring marriage to the child's biological father is associated with better health than remaining unpartnered. C1 [Williams, Kristi] Ohio State Univ, Dept Sociol, Columbus, OH 43210 USA. [Sassler, Sharon; Addo, Fenaba] Cornell Univ, Dept Policy Anal & Management, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA. [Frech, Adrianne] Univ Akron, Akron, OH 44325 USA. RP Williams, K (reprint author), Ohio State Univ, Dept Sociol, 238 Townshend Hall, Columbus, OH 43210 USA EM williams.2339@osu.edu CR Hummer RA, 2010, FUTURE CHILD, V20, P113 Gangl M, 2010, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V36, P21, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.012809.102702 UMBERSON D, 2010, J HLTH SOCIAL BEHAV, V51, P554 IRVING SK, 2010, 2010 FALL RES C ASS Cornwell EY, 2009, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V50, P31 Brown SL, 2009, DEMOGRAPHY, V46, P85 Hamilton BE, 2009, NATL VITAL STAT REPO, V57 McLanahan S, 2009, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V621, P111, DOI 10.1177/0002716208324862 United States Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2009, NAT LONG SURV YOUTH Lichter DT, 2008, J MARRIAGE FAM, V70, P861 Williams K, 2008, SOC FORCES, V86, P1481 Graefe DR, 2008, J POLICY ANAL MANAG, V27, P479, DOI 10.1002/pam.20352 Lopoo LM, 2008, SOC SERV REV, V82, P253, DOI 10.1086/589902 Meadows SO, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P314 McLanahan S, 2008, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V34, P257, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.34.040507.134549 RAY R, 2008, PARENTAL LEAVE POLIC HOFFMAN SD, 2008, KIDS HAVING KIDS EC, P74 Osborne C, 2007, J MARRIAGE FAM, V69, P1345, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2007.00451.x Avison WR, 2007, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V48, P301 Henretta JC, 2007, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V48, P254 Lichter DT, 2007, SOC SERV REV, V81, P397, DOI 10.1086/521083 Fomby P, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P181 Heard HE, 2007, J FAM ISSUES, V28, P319, DOI 10.1177/0192513X06296307 Furstenberg F., 2007, DESTINIES DISADVANTA Royston P, 2007, STATA J, V7, P445 Morgan Stephen L., 2007, COUNTERFACTUALS CAUS *US BUR CENS, 2007, CURR POP SURV ANN SO Palloni A, 2006, DEMOGRAPHY, V43, P587, DOI 10.1353/dem.2006.0036 Morgan SL, 2006, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V35, P3, DOI 10.1177/0049124106289164 Carlson MJ, 2006, J MARRIAGE FAM, V68, P718, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2006.00285.x Wildsmith E, 2006, J MARRIAGE FAM, V68, P491, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2006.00267.x Goldscheider F, 2006, J MARRIAGE FAM, V68, P275, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2006.00252.x Westin M, 2006, SCAND J PUBLIC HEALT, V34, P182, DOI 10.1080/14034940500325939 Pearson J, 2006, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V49, P67, DOI 10.1525/sop.2006.49.1.67 Edin K, 2005, FUTURE CHILD, V15, P117, DOI 10.1353/foc.2005.0017 Nock SL, 2005, FUTURE CHILD, V15, P13, DOI 10.1353/foc.2005.0019 Hawkins DN, 2005, SOC FORCES, V84, P451, DOI 10.1353/sof.2005.0103 Pearlin LI, 2005, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V46, P205 Barrett AE, 2005, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V46, P156 Lynch J, 2005, ANNU REV PUBL HEALTH, V26, P1, DOI 10.1146/annurev.publhealth.26.021304.144505 Edin K., 2005, PROMISES I CAN KEEP Harknett K, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P790 Oropesa RS, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P901, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00061.x Johnson RW, 2004, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V59, pS315 Black DA, 2004, J ECONOMETRICS, V121, P99, DOI 10.1016/j.jeconom.2003.10.006 Carlson M, 2004, DEMOGRAPHY, V41, P237, DOI 10.1353/dem.2004.0012 Ozawa MN, 2004, FAM RELAT, V53, P301 Sassler S, 2004, J FAM ISSUES, V25, P139, DOI 10.1177/0192513X03257708 Hayward MD, 2004, DEMOGRAPHY, V41, P87, DOI 10.1353/dem.2004.0005 Wang JL, 2004, SOC PSYCH PSYCH EPID, V39, P26, DOI 10.1007/s00127-004-0699-7 LICHTER DT, 2004, AM PEOPLE CENSUS 200 Williams K, 2003, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V44, P470, DOI 10.2307/1519794 Geronimus AT, 2003, SOC SCI MED, V57, P881, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(02)00456-2 Wu Z, 2003, J FAM ISSUES, V24, P811, DOI 10.1177/0192513X03254519 Cairney J, 2003, SOC PSYCH PSYCH EPID, V38, P442, DOI 10.1007/s00127-003-0661-0 Hofferth SL, 2003, J MARRIAGE FAM, V65, P213, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2003.00213.x Lichter DT, 2003, SOC PROBL, V50, P60, DOI 10.1525/sp.2003.50.1.60 Leuven E, 2003, PSMATCH2 STATA MODUL Smedley BD, 2003, UNEQUAL TREATMENT CO Graefe DR, 2002, PERSPECT SEX REPRO H, V34, P286, DOI 10.2307/3097747 Mulatu MS, 2002, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V43, P22, DOI 10.2307/3090243 Dehejia RH, 2002, REV ECON STAT, V84, P151, DOI 10.1162/003465302317331982 Romer G, 2002, CLIN CHILD PSYCHOL P, V7, P17, DOI 10.1177/1359104502007001003 SIGLERUSHTON W, 2002, POPULATION, V57, P509, DOI 10.2307/3246637 MINCY RB, 2002, 0203FF CTR RES CHILD Timmer SG, 2001, FAM RELAT, V50, P178, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3729.2001.00178.x Rodrigue JR, 2001, CHILD HEALTH CARE, V30, P79, DOI 10.1207/S15326888CHC3002_1 Waldfogel J, 2001, FUTURE CHILD, V11, P99 Waite L. J., 2000, CASE MARRIAGE WHY MA Whitehead M, 2000, SOC SCI MED, V50, P255, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(99)00280-4 Ventura S. J., 2000, NATL VITAL STAT REPO, V48 Oppenheimer ValerieKincaid, 2000, TIES BIND PERSPECTIV, P283 Hope S, 1999, SOC SCI MED, V49, P1637, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(99)00251-8 Nielsen Linda, 1999, J DIVORCE REMARRIAGE, V30, P115, DOI 10.1300/J087v30n01_08 FERRARO KF, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P304 SHOULS S, 1999, POPULATION TRENDS, V95, P41 Benzeval M, 1998, SOC SCI MED, V46, P1337, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(97)10083-1 Forehand R, 1998, J ABNORM CHILD PSYCH, V26, P119, DOI 10.1023/A:1022669805492 Idler EL, 1997, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V38, P21, DOI 10.2307/2955359 Kuh D., 1997, LIFE COURSE APPROACH Demo DH, 1996, J FAM ISSUES, V17, P388, DOI 10.1177/019251396017003005 Geronimus AT, 1996, SOC SCI MED, V42, P589, DOI 10.1016/0277-9536(95)00159-X Elstad JI, 1996, SOC SCI MED, V42, P75, DOI 10.1016/0277-9536(95)00078-X Clarkberg M, 1995, SOC FORCES, V74, P609, DOI 10.2307/2580494 LINK BG, 1995, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, P80 MARTIKAINEN P, 1995, SOC SCI MED, V40, P199, DOI 10.1016/0277-9536(94)E0065-Z WU LL, 1993, AM SOCIOL REV, V58, P210, DOI 10.2307/2095967 Anderson E., 1992, STREETWISE RACE CLAS ELDER GH, 1988, CHILD DEV, V69, P1 Wilson W. J., 1987, TRULY DISADVANTAGED ROSENBAUM PR, 1983, BIOMETRIKA, V70, P41, DOI 10.1093/biomet/70.1.41 CHERLIN A, 1978, AM J SOCIOL, V84, P634, DOI 10.1086/226830 NR 92 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD JUN PY 2011 VL 76 IS 3 BP 465 EP 486 DI 10.1177/0003122411409705 PG 22 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 769SD UT WOS:000291037700005 ER PT J AU Kim, HS AF Kim, Hyun Sik TI Consequences of Parental Divorce for Child Development SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE children of divorce; childhood; three-stage model ID FAMILY-STRUCTURE TRANSITIONS; MARITAL DISRUPTION; BEHAVIOR PROBLEMS; RECIPROCAL INFLUENCES; UNION DISSOLUTION; PROPENSITY SCORE; UNITED-STATES; ADJUSTMENT; CONFLICT; METAANALYSIS AB In this article, I propose a three-stage estimation model to examine the effect of parental divorce on the development of children's cognitive skills and noncognitive traits. Using a framework that includes pre-, in-, and post-divorce time periods, I disentangle the complex factors affecting children of divorce. I use the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Kindergarten Class 1998 to 1999 (ECLS-K), a multiwave longitudinal dataset, to assess the three-stage model. To evaluate the parameters of interest more rigorously, I employ a stage-specific ordinary least squares (OLS) model, a counterfactual matching estimator, and a piece-wise growth curve model. Within some combinations of developmental domains and stages, in particular from the in-divorce stage onward, I find negative effects of divorce even after accounting for selection factors that influence children's skills and traits at or before the beginning of the dissolution process. These negative outcomes do not appear to intensify or abate in the ensuing study period. C1 Univ Wisconsin, Dept Sociol, Madison, WI 53706 USA. RP Kim, HS (reprint author), Univ Wisconsin, Dept Sociol, 8128 William H Sewell Social Sci Bldg,1180 Observ, Madison, WI 53706 USA EM hskim@ssc.wisc.edu CR Cooper CE, 2009, J MARRIAGE FAM, V71, P558 Lansford JE, 2009, PERSPECT PSYCHOL SCI, V4, P140, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-6924.2009.01114.x Gautier PA, 2009, SCAND J ECON, V111, P439, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9442.2009.01571.x Boyle PJ, 2008, DEMOGRAPHY, V45, P209, DOI 10.1353/dem.2008.0000 CHERLIN AJ, 2008, PUBLIC PRIVATE FAMIL ELWERT F, 2008, ENDOGENOUS SEL UNPUB Cui M, 2007, DEV PSYCHOL, V43, P1544, DOI 10.1037/0012-1649.43.6.1544 Bulanda JR, 2007, SOC SCI RES, V36, P945, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2006.04.001 Frisco ML, 2007, J MARRIAGE FAM, V69, P721, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2007.00402.x Fomby P, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P181 Lansford JE, 2006, J FAM PSYCHOL, V20, P292, DOI 10.1037/0893-3200.20.2.292 D'Onofrio BM, 2006, DEV PSYCHOL, V42, P486, DOI 10.1037/0012-1649.42.3.486 Abadie A, 2006, ECONOMETRICA, V74, P235, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0262.2006.00655.x Tourangeau K., 2006, EARLY CHILDHOOD LONG Diamond A., 2006, GENETIC MATCHING EST Sigle-Rushton W, 2005, DEMOGRAPHY, V42, P427, DOI 10.1353/dem.2005.0026 Aughinbaugh A, 2005, DEMOGRAPHY, V42, P447, DOI 10.1353/dem.2005.0023 Kaplan H., 2005, HDB RESILIENCE CHILD, P39, DOI 10.1007/0-306-48572-9_3 Jenkins J, 2005, CHILD DEV, V76, P24, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2005.00827.x Wallerstein JS, 2004, PSYCHOANAL PSYCHOL, V21, P353, DOI 10.1037/0736-9735.21.3.353 Carlson M, 2004, DEMOGRAPHY, V41, P237, DOI 10.1353/dem.2004.0012 Heckman J, 2004, REV ECON STAT, V86, P30, DOI 10.1162/003465304323023660 Malone PS, 2004, STRUCT EQU MODELING, V11, P401, DOI 10.1207/s15328007sem1103_6 PAPALIA DE, 2004, CHILDS WORLD INFANCY RIBAR DC, 2004, 998 IZA DP Kelly JB, 2003, FAM RELAT, V52, P352, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3729.2003.00352.x Hetherington EM, 2003, CHILDHOOD, V10, P217, DOI 10.1177/0907568203010002007 Singer J. D., 2003, APPL LONGITUDINAL DA Kim KJ, 2003, CHILD DEV, V74, P127, DOI 10.1111/1467-8624.00525 WINDLE M, 2003, HDB APPL DEV SCI, V2, P17 Sun YM, 2002, J MARRIAGE FAM, V64, P472, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2002.00472.x Dehejia RH, 2002, REV ECON STAT, V84, P151, DOI 10.1162/003465302317331982 Raudenbush S.W., 2002, HIERARCHICAL LINEAR Rosenbaum Paul R., 2002, OBSERVATIONAL STUDIE AMATO PR, 2002, VIRGINIA J SOCIAL PO, V9, P71 Amato PR, 2001, J FAM PSYCHOL, V15, P355, DOI 10.1037//0893-3200.15.3.355 Thomson E, 2001, J MARRIAGE FAM, V63, P370, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2001.00370.x Sun YM, 2001, J FAM ISSUES, V22, P27, DOI 10.1177/019251301022001002 Pearl J, 2000, CAUSALITY MODELS REA Hanson TL, 1999, SOC FORCES, V77, P1283, DOI 10.2307/3005877 Lohr S.L., 1999, SAMPLING DESIGN ANAL Swanson CB, 1999, SOCIOL EDUC, V72, P54, DOI 10.2307/2673186 Heckman JJ, 1998, REV ECON STUD, V65, P261, DOI 10.1111/1467-937X.00044 Cherlin AJ, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P239, DOI 10.2307/2657325 Amato P., 1997, GENERATION RISK GROW Smith HL, 1997, SOCIOL METHODOL, V27, P325, DOI 10.1111/1467-9531.271030 Peterson RR, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P528, DOI 10.2307/2096363 MORRISON DR, 1995, J MARRIAGE FAM, V57, P800, DOI 10.2307/353933 AMATO PR, 1995, SOC FORCES, V73, P895, DOI 10.2307/2580551 ASTONE NM, 1994, DEMOGRAPHY, V31, P575, DOI 10.2307/2061791 VERHULST FC, 1994, J ABNORM CHILD PSYCH, V22, P531, DOI 10.1007/BF02168936 McLanahan Sara, 1994, GROWING SINGLE PAREN AMATO PR, 1993, J MARRIAGE FAM, V55, P23, DOI 10.2307/352954 Efron B., 1993, INTRO BOOTSTRAP CHERLIN AJ, 1991, SCIENCE, V252, P1386, DOI 10.1126/science.2047851 AMATO PR, 1991, J MARRIAGE FAM, V53, P43, DOI 10.2307/353132 ALLISON PD, 1989, DEV PSYCHOL, V25, P540, DOI 10.1037//0012-1649.25.4.540 PETERSON JL, 1986, J MARRIAGE FAM, V48, P295, DOI 10.2307/352397 GLENN ND, 1985, J MARRIAGE FAM, V47, P641, DOI 10.2307/352265 FISCHER M, 1984, CHILD DEV, V55, P137, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8624.1984.tb00279.x ROSENBAUM PR, 1983, BIOMETRIKA, V70, P41, DOI 10.1093/biomet/70.1.41 EMERY RE, 1982, PSYCHOL BULL, V92, P310, DOI 10.1037//0033-2909.92.2.310 HETHERINGTON EM, 1979, AM PSYCHOL, V34, P851, DOI 10.1037//0003-066X.34.10.851 Sekhon Jasjeet S., J STAT SOFT IN PRESS NR 64 TC 2 Z9 2 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD JUN PY 2011 VL 76 IS 3 BP 487 EP 511 DI 10.1177/0003122411407748 PG 25 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 769SD UT WOS:000291037700006 ER PT J AU Agadjanian, V Arnaldo, C Cau, B AF Agadjanian, Victor Arnaldo, Carlos Cau, Boaventura TI Health Costs of Wealth Gains: Labor Migration and Perceptions of HIV/AIDS Risks in Mozambique SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA; SEXUALLY-TRANSMITTED-DISEASES; TO-URBAN MIGRANTS; SOUTH-AFRICA; HIV-INFECTION; RURAL MALAWI; SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; EMPLOYMENT PATTERNS; TEMPORARY MIGRATION; TRANSACTIONAL SEX AB The study employs survey data from rural Mozambique to examine how men's labor migration affects their non-migrating wives' perceptions of HIV/AIDS risks. Using a conceptual framework centered on tradeoffs between economic security and health risks that men's migration entails for their left-behind wives, it compares women married to migrants and those married to non-migrants while also distinguishing between economically successful and unsuccessful migration. The analysis finds that the economic success of men's migration, rather than migration itself, significantly predicts women's worries about getting infected by their husbands or their own extramarital partners, and their husbands' stance on condom use. These findings are situated within a broader context of socio-economic, gender, and marital dynamics and vulnerabilities produced or amplified by male labor migration in sub-Saharan and similar developing settings. C1 [Agadjanian, Victor] Arizona State Univ, Sch Social & Family Dynam, Ctr Populat Dynam, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA. [Arnaldo, Carlos; Cau, Boaventura] Eduardo Mondlane Univ, Maputo, Mozambique. RP Agadjanian, V (reprint author), Arizona State Univ, Sch Social & Family Dynam, Ctr Populat Dynam, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA EM Victor.Agadjanian@asu.edu CR Sevoyan A, 2010, INT MIGR REV, V44, P354, DOI 10.1111/j.1747-7379.2010.00809.x Luke N, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P1435 Ministry of Health, 2010, [Inquerito nacional de prevalencia, riscos comportamentais e informacao sobre o HIV e SIDA (INSIDA), 2009. Relatorio final, National Survey of HIV/AIDS prevalence, behavioural risks, and information, 2009: Final report] Yabiku ST, 2010, POP STUD-J DEMOG, V64, P293, DOI 10.1080/00324728.2010.510200 Tavory I, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P171 Anglewicz P, 2009, DEMOGR RES, V20, P65, DOI 10.4054/DemRes.2009.20.6 Ueyama M, 2009, DEMOGRAPHY, V46, P43, DOI 10.1353/dem.0.0039 Lokshin M, 2009, WORLD BANK ECON REV, V23, P481, DOI 10.1093/wber/lhp011 Yang XS, 2008, SOC PROBL, V55, P322, DOI 10.1525/sp.2008.55.3.322 Agadjanian V, 2008, SOCIOL QUART, V49, P407, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.2008.00121.x Fortson JG, 2008, DEMOGRAPHY, V45, P303, DOI 10.1353/dem.0.0006 Reniers G, 2008, DEMOGRAPHY, V45, P417, DOI 10.1353/dem.0.0002 Hargreaves JR, 2008, AIDS, V22, P403 Krishnan S, 2008, ANN NY ACAD SCI, V1136, P101, DOI 10.1196/annals.1425.013 Boehm DA, 2008, LAT AM PERSPECT, V35, P16, DOI 10.1177/0094582X07310843 Agadjanian V, 2008, INT MIGR, V46, P189, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-2435.2008.00466.x *MIN HLTH, 2008, REL REV DAD VIG EP H *S AFR MIGR PROJ, 2008, S AFR MIGR PROJ MIGR, V50 Menjivar C, 2007, SOC SCI QUART, V88, P1243, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-6237.2007.00501.x Mishra V, 2007, AIDS, V21, pS17 Swidler A, 2007, STUD FAMILY PLANN, V38, P147, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4465.2007.00127.x Mtika MM, 2007, SOC SCI MED, V64, P2454, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2007.04.006 MacKellar DA, 2007, AIDS BEHAV, V11, P263, DOI 10.1007/s10461-006-9136-0 Tawfik L, 2007, SOC SCI MED, V64, P1090, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2006.10.002 Hunter M, 2007, SOC SCI MED, V64, P689, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2006.09.015 Coffee M, 2007, AIDS, V21, P343, DOI 10.1097/QAD.0b013e328011dac9 Vletter F. de, 2007, Development Southern Africa, V24, P137, DOI 10.1080/03768350601165975 Yang XS, 2006, STUD FAMILY PLANN, V37, P241, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4465.2006.00103.x Amuedo-Dorantes C, 2006, AM ECON REV, V96, P222, DOI 10.1257/000282806777211946 Lurie MN, 2006, J ETHN MIGR STUD, V32, P649, DOI 10.1080/13691830600610056 Mundandi C, 2006, TROP MED INT HEALTH, V11, P705, DOI 10.1111/j.1365-3156.2006.01614.x Hughes GD, 2006, SAMJ S AFR MED J, V96, P434 Agadjanian V, 2005, SOC SCI MED, V61, P1529, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2005.03.012 Zuma K, 2005, EPIDEMIOL INFECT, V133, P421, DOI 10.1017/S0950268804003607 Coffee MP, 2005, J INFECT DIS, V191, pS159, DOI 10.1086/425270 Smith KP, 2005, SOC SCI MED, V60, P649, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2004.06.009 Parrenas R. S., 2005, CHILDREN GLOBAL MIGR Liu HJ, 2005, AIDS PATIENT CARE ST, V19, P49, DOI 10.1089/apc.2005.19.49 Wojcicki JM, 2005, J BIOSOC SCI, V37, P1, DOI 10.1017/S0021932004006534 *MIN HLTH, 2005, REL REV DAD VIG EP H HE N, 2005, SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED, V32, P266 Li XM, 2004, AIDS EDUC PREV, V16, P538, DOI 10.1521/aeap.16.6.538.53787 Curtis SL, 2004, SEX TRANSM INFECT, V80, P22, DOI 10.1136/sti.2004.011650 Dunkle KL, 2004, SOC SCI MED, V59, P1581, DOI 10.1016/j.socsimed.2004.02.003 Pribilsky J, 2004, GLOBAL NETW, V4, P313, DOI 10.1111/j.1471-0374.2004.00096.x Dunkle KL, 2004, LANCET, V363, P1415, DOI 10.1016/S0140-6736(04)16098-4 Yang XS, 2004, INT MIGR REV, V38, P212 Arnaldo C., 2004, African Population Studies, V19, P143 Aysa M, 2004, CROSSING THE BORDER, P131 SADIQI F, 2004, FINISTERRA REV PORTU, V39, P59 Zuma K, 2003, INT J STD AIDS, V14, P814, DOI 10.1258/095646203322556147 Lurie MN, 2003, AIDS, V17, P2245, DOI 10.1097/01.aids.0000088197.77946.ba Spielberg F, 2003, JAIDS-J ACQ IMM DEF, V32, P318, DOI 10.1097/00126334-200303010-00012 Elifson KW, 2003, J RELIG HEALTH, V42, P47, DOI 10.1023/A:1022264711670 Lurie MN, 2003, SEX TRANSM DIS, V30, P149, DOI 10.1097/00007435-200302000-00011 Kothari U, 2003, J INT DEV, V15, P645, DOI 10.1002/jid.1022 Adepoju A, 2003, INT MIGR, V41, P3, DOI 10.1111/1468-2435.00228 BARRADAS R, 2003, COMM GEOGR BUR WORKS BARRETO AL, 2002, 12 INT AIDS C JUL 7 Hadi A., 2001, International Journal of Population Geography, V7, P53, DOI 10.1002/ijpg.211 KNAUDER S., 2000, GLOBALIZATION URBAN Brockerhoff M, 1999, INT MIGR REV, V33, P833, DOI 10.2307/2547354 APPLEYARD R, 1998, INT MIGR, V36, P445 Campbell C, 1997, SOC SCI MED, V45, P273, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(96)00343-7 Kowalewski MR, 1997, HEALTH EDUC BEHAV, V24, P313, DOI 10.1177/109019819702400305 Orubuloye IO, 1997, SOC SCI MED, V44, P1195, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(96)00254-7 Mabey D, 1997, GENITOURIN MED, V73, P18 *E MONDL U CTR AFR, 1997, MOZ MIN STUD EXP LAB CALDWELL JC, 1997, SEXUAL CULTURES MIGR, P41 DECOSAS J, 1995, LANCET, V346, P826, DOI 10.1016/S0140-6736(95)91631-8 QUINN TC, 1994, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V91, P2407, DOI 10.1073/pnas.91.7.2407 DESNYDER VNS, 1993, HISPANIC J BEHAV SCI, V15, P391, DOI 10.1177/07399863930153008 JENKINS P, 1993, 50 HAR WATT U ED COL DESCHRYVER A, 1990, INT MIGR, V29, P13 HUNT CW, 1989, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V30, P353, DOI 10.2307/2136985 DOW S, 1989, URBAN SETTLEMENT STR CRUMMETT M, 1987, RURAL WOMEN STATE PO, P239 FIRST R, 1983, BLACK GOLD MOZAMBICA Murray C., 1981, FAMILIES DIVIDED IMP GORDON E, 1981, J DEV STUD, V17, P59, DOI 10.1080/00220388108421798 PROTHERO RM, 1977, INT J EPIDEMIOL, V6, P259, DOI 10.1093/ije/6.3.259 AGADJANIAN V, DEMOGRAPHY ANGLEWICZ P, DEMOGRAPHY IN PRESS NR 83 TC 1 Z9 1 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD JUN PY 2011 VL 89 IS 4 BP 1097 EP 1117 PG 21 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 766VN UT WOS:000290814800001 ER PT J AU Lu, Y Treiman, DJ AF Lu, Yao Treiman, Donald J. TI Migration, Remittances and Educational Stratification among Blacks in Apartheid and Post-Apartheid South Africa SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID LABOR MIGRATION; HOUSEHOLD; INCOME; ATTAINMENT; CONTEXT; MEXICO AB This article extends previous work on family structure and children's education by conceptualizing migration as a distinct form of family disruption that reduces parental input but brings substantial economic benefits through remittances. It examines the multiple and countervailing effects of migration on schooling in the context of substantial migration and limited educational opportunities for blacks in South Africa. The receipt of remittances substantially increases black children's school attendance, but has no such effect for whites. The effect for blacks is in part attributable to improved household economic conditions that increase household educational spending and reduce the demand for child labor. We also find a negative effect of parental absence due to migration, but it is largely cushioned by inflows of remittances. Sensitivity analyses using propensity score methods and contextual fixed-effect modeling suggest that the beneficial effect of remittances is relatively robust. We find further that remittances help ameliorate inter-familial socioeconomic inequality in schooling. Finally, we evaluate possible temporal changes and show that the positive and equalizing effects of remittances persisted during and after the apartheid regime. We conclude that labor migration and remittances, as institutionalized family strategies adopted by many blacks, help reconfigure structural opportunities in the educational stratification process in South Africa. C1 [Lu, Yao] Columbia Univ, Dept Sociol, New York, NY 10027 USA. [Treiman, Donald J.] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90024 USA. RP Lu, Y (reprint author), Columbia Univ, Dept Sociol, 501 Knox Hall, New York, NY 10027 USA EM yao.lu@columbia.edu CR RATHA D, 2009, DOLLARS BORDERS CAN Shadish WR, 2008, J AM STAT ASSOC, V103, P1334, DOI 10.1198/016214508000000733 Adams Jr. R.H., 2008, The Impact of Remittances on Poverty and Inequality in Ghana Woodruff C, 2007, J DEV ECON, V82, P509, DOI 10.1016/j.jdeveco.2006.03.006 Morgan Stephen L., 2007, COUNTERFACTUALS CAUS Adams RH, 2006, J AFR ECON, V15, P396, DOI 10.1093/jafeco/ejl028 Dreby J, 2006, GENDER SOC, V20, P32, DOI 10.1177/0891243205282660 Acosta P, 2006, LABOR SUPPLY SCH ATT Posel D., 2006, POVERTY POLICY POSTA, P351 Collinson M, 2006, AFRICA MOVE AFRICAN, P194 MCKENZIE D, 2006, POLICY RES WORKING P, V3952 Brown RPC, 2005, INT MIGR REV, V39, P407 Borraz F., 2005, GLOBAL EC J, V5, P1 Lopez-Cordoba E., 2005, ECONOMIA, V6, P217 *INT ORG MIGR, 2005, MIGR RES SER, V19 BRYANT J, 2005, 200505 INN DiPrete TA, 2004, SOCIOL METHODOL, V34, P271, DOI 10.1111/j.0081-1750.2004.00154.x LADD H, 2004, ELUSIVE EQUITY ED RE AMOATENG A, 2004, HSRC 10 YEARS DEMOCR CURRAN S, 2004, INEQUALITY ACROSS SO, P59 Posel D, 2003, S AFR J ECON, V71, P455 Hanson Gordon, 2003, EMIGRATION ED UNPUB CROSS C, 2003, MIGRANT WORKERS REMI Townsend N, 2002, POP STUD-J DEMOG, V56, P215, DOI 10.1080/00324720215925 Rosenbaum Paul R., 2002, OBSERVATIONAL STUDIE Little RJA, 2002, STAT ANAL MISSING DA United Nations, 2002, HUM DEV REP 2002 DEE Kandel W, 2001, INT MIGR REV, V35, P1205 Posel D, 2001, SOC DYNAMICS, V27, P165 Parrenas R. S., 2001, SERVANTS GLOBALIZATI Buchmann C, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P77, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.27.1.77 Case A, 1999, Q J ECON, V114, P1047, DOI 10.1162/003355399556124 Behrman JR, 1999, WORLD BANK ECON REV, V13, P211 Carter MR, 1999, WORLD DEV, V27, P1, DOI 10.1016/S0305-750X(98)00129-6 Levitt P, 1998, INT MIGR REV, V32, P926, DOI 10.2307/2547666 Barham B, 1998, J DEV ECON, V55, P307, DOI 10.1016/S0304-3878(98)90038-4 Constas MA, 1997, TEACH COLL REC, V98, P682 Duncan G. J., 1997, CONSEQUENCES GROWING Lloyd CB, 1996, POPUL DEV REV, V22, P265, DOI 10.2307/2137435 Treiman DJ, 1996, DEMOGRAPHY, V33, P111, DOI 10.2307/2061717 McLanahan Sara, 1994, GROWING SINGLE PAREN Stark O, 1991, MIGRATION LABOUR TOMLINSON R, 1990, URBANIZATION POSTAPA TAYLOR E, 1987, AM J AGR ECON, V69, P626 STARK O, 1985, AM ECON REV, V75, P173 GOMES M, 1984, POPUL DEV REV, V10, P647, DOI 10.2307/1973285 REICHERT JS, 1981, HUM ORGAN, V40, P56 NR 47 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD JUN PY 2011 VL 89 IS 4 BP 1119 EP 1143 PG 25 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 766VN UT WOS:000290814800002 ER PT J AU Fullerton, AS Villemez, WJ AF Fullerton, Andrew S. Villemez, Wayne J. TI Why Does the Spatial Agglomeration of Firms Benefit Workers? Examining the Role of Organizational Diversity in US Industries and Labor Markets SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID INCOME INEQUALITY; SEGMENTATION; CITIES; POWER AB Several recent studies across the social sciences show that the spatial agglomeration of employment in a local labor market benefits both firms and workers in terms of better firm performance and higher wages. Drawing from the organizational ecology perspective, we argue that workers receive higher wages in large industrial clusters and urban labor markets because of the greater degree of organizational diversity relative to smaller local industries and labor markets. Using data from the 1990 PUMS-L, we employ a three-level hierarchical linear model in order to test hypotheses regarding organizational diversity and the effects of industrial and urban agglomeration on wages. We find that workers benefit from both forms of agglomeration due to greater establishment size and industrial diversity in large industrial clusters and urban labor markets. We also find that urban agglomeration has a larger substantive effect on wages than industrial agglomeration in reduced models, but the industrial agglomeration effect is more robust across models. These findings support the organizational ecology perspective, which suggests that workers earn higher wages in local industry clusters and urban labor markets because greater organizational diversity leads to more optimal matching between workers and employers. However, the wage premium associated with urban labor markets is also due to other factors, such as greater levels of human capital and higher rates of union density. C1 [Fullerton, Andrew S.] Oklahoma State Univ, Dept Sociol, Stillwater, OK 74078 USA. [Villemez, Wayne J.] Wellesley Coll, Wellesley, MA 02181 USA. RP Fullerton, AS (reprint author), Oklahoma State Univ, Dept Sociol, 431 Murray, Stillwater, OK 74078 USA EM andrew.fullerton@okstate.edu CR Sorensen JB, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P766 Sorensen JB, 2007, AM BEHAV SCI, V50, P659, DOI 10.1177/0002764206295020 Sable M, 2007, TECHNOL FORECAST SOC, V74, P36, DOI 10.1016/j.techfore.2006.05.016 Wheeler CH, 2006, J URBAN ECON, V60, P162, DOI 10.1016/j.jue.2006.02.004 de Blasio G, 2005, J REGIONAL SCI, V45, P797, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-4146.2005.00393.x Royston Patrick, 2004, STATA J, V4, P227 Fernandez RM, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P545, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.29.010202.100034 RAUDENBUSH SW, 2004, HLM6 USERS GUIDE Hirsch BT, 2003, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V56, P349, DOI 10.2307/3590942 Weeden KA, 2002, AM J SOCIOL, V108, P55, DOI 10.1086/344121 Fujita M. M., 2002, EC AGGLOMERATION CIT Raudenbush S.W., 2002, HIERARCHICAL LINEAR Wheeler CH, 2001, J LABOR ECON, V19, P879, DOI 10.1086/322823 Rosenthal SS, 2001, J URBAN ECON, V50, P191, DOI 10.1006/juec.2001.2230 Phillips DJ, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P1058, DOI 10.1086/320293 BEGGS JJ, 2001, SOURCEBOOK LABOR MAR, V1, P503 WALLACE M, 2001, SOURCEBOOK LABOR MAR, P101 Carroll G., 2000, DEMOGRAPHY CORPORATI Porter ME, 1998, HARVARD BUS REV, V76, P77 Tolbert Charles M., 1997, US COMMUTING ZONES L Tolbert Charles M, 1995, PUMS L DATA ASS FILE GREVE HR, 1994, ACTA SOCIOL, V37, P119 Saxenian A, 1994, REGIONAL ADVANTAGE C RAUCH JE, 1993, J URBAN ECON, V34, P380, DOI 10.1006/juec.1993.1042 Krugman P., 1991, GEOGRAPHY TRADE *US BUR CENS, 1991, COUNT BUS PATT 1989 DAVID PA, 1990, J URBAN ECON, V28, P349, DOI 10.1016/0094-1190(90)90033-J SOUTH SJ, 1990, AM SOCIOL REV, V55, P591, DOI 10.2307/2095809 DIAMOND CA, 1990, J LABOR ECON, V8, P175, DOI 10.1086/298219 FLIGSTEIN N, 1988, SOCIOL QUART, V29, P5, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1988.tb01240.x Hannan Michael T., 1988, SOCIAL CHANGE LIFE C, V1, P161 HODSON R, 1982, AM SOCIOL REV, V47, P727, DOI 10.2307/2095209 Gordon David M., 1982, SEGMENTED WORK DIVID KALLEBERG AL, 1981, AM J SOCIOL, V87, P651, DOI 10.1086/227499 BECK EM, 1978, AM SOCIOL REV, V43, P704, DOI 10.2307/2094545 HODSON R, 1978, POLIT SOC, V8, P429, DOI 10.1177/003232927800800305 REICH M, 1973, AM ECON REV, V63, P359 Averitt Robert T., 1968, DUAL EC BLAUNER R, 1964, ALIENATION FREEDOM Marshall A., 1961, PRINCIPLES EC NR 40 TC 1 Z9 1 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD JUN PY 2011 VL 89 IS 4 BP 1145 EP 1164 PG 20 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 766VN UT WOS:000290814800003 ER PT J AU Stainback, K Ratliff, TN Roscigno, VJ AF Stainback, Kevin Ratliff, Thomas N. Roscigno, Vincent J. TI The Context of Workplace Sex Discrimination: Sex Composition, Workplace Culture and Relative Power SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID ORGANIZATIONAL CONTEXT; GLASS ESCALATOR; GENDER; INEQUALITY; WORK; HARASSMENT; EMPLOYMENT; RACE; JOBS; WOMEN AB Building on prior work surrounding negative workplace experiences, such as bullying and sexual harassment, we examine the extent to which organizational context is meaningful for the subjective experience of sex discrimination. Data draw on the 2002 National Study of the Changing Workforce, which provides a key indicator of individuals' sex discrimination experiences as well as arguably influential dimensions of organizational context-i.e., sex composition, workplace culture and relative power-suggested by prior research. Results indicate that the experience of sex discrimination is reduced for both women and men when they are part of the numerical majority of their work group. Although supportive workplace cultures mitigate the likelihood of sex discrimination, relative power in the workplace seems to matter little. We conclude by revisiting these results relative to perspectives surrounding hierarchy maintenance, group competition and internal cultural dynamics. C1 [Stainback, Kevin] Purdue Univ, Dept Sociol, W Lafayette, IN 47907 USA. [Ratliff, Thomas N.] Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA USA. [Roscigno, Vincent J.] Ohio State Univ, Columbus, OH 43210 USA. RP Stainback, K (reprint author), Purdue Univ, Dept Sociol, 700 W State St, W Lafayette, IN 47907 USA EM stainback@purdue.edu CR Huffman ML, 2010, ADMIN SCI QUART, V55, P255 Stainback K, 2010, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V36, P225, DOI 10.1146/annurev-soc-070308-120014 HIRSH CE, 2010, LAW SOC REV, V44, P269 Stainback K, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P800 Kalev A, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P1591 Roscigno VJ, 2009, SOC FORCES, V87, P1561 Ortiz SY, 2009, SOCIOL QUART, V50, P336, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.2009.01143.x Gorman EH, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P1428 Hirsh C.E., 2009, IND RELAT, V48, P512 LOPEZ SH, 2009, SOCIOLOGICAL Q, V50, P336 Llorens JJ, 2008, REV PUBLIC PERS ADM, V28, P308, DOI 10.1177/0734371X08324214 Choi S, 2008, WORK OCCUPATION, V35, P422, DOI 10.1177/0730888408326766 Chamberlain LJ, 2008, WORK OCCUPATION, V35, P262, DOI 10.1177/0730888408322008 Llorens JJ, 2008, J PUBL ADM RES THEOR, V18, P397, DOI 10.1093/jopart/mum020 Hirsh CE, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P1394, DOI 10.1086/525510 Correll SJ, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V112, P1297, DOI 10.1086/511799 Roscigno V. J., 2007, FACE DISCRIMINATION DOBBIN F, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V112, P1204 SCHMIDT T, 2007, FACE DISCRIMINATION, P73 Hodson R, 2006, WORK OCCUPATION, V33, P382, DOI 10.1177/0730888406292885 Vallas SP, 2006, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P1677, DOI 10.1086/499909 Mennino SF, 2005, SOCIOL QUART, V46, P107 Kmec JA, 2005, WORK OCCUPATION, V32, P322, DOI 10.1177/0930888405277703 Nielsen Laura Beth, 2005, WISC LAW REV, V2005, P663 Ridgeway CL, 2004, GENDER SOC, V18, P510, DOI 10.1177/0891243204265269 Elliott JR, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P365 Uggen C, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P64 Horton NJ, 2003, AM STAT, V57, P229, DOI 10.1198/0003130032314 Pavalko EK, 2003, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V44, P18, DOI 10.2307/1519813 Feagin J. R., 2003, MANY COSTS RACISM HOWARD JA, 2003, HDB SOCIAL PSYCHOL, P259 Budig MJ, 2002, SOC PROBL, V49, P258, DOI 10.1525/sp.2002.49.2.258 Mueller CW, 2001, WORK OCCUPATION, V28, P411, DOI 10.1177/0730888401028004003 Elliott JR, 2001, SOC SCI RES, V30, P401, DOI 10.1006/ssre.2001.0704 Elliott JR, 2001, SOC PROBL, V48, P258, DOI 10.1525/sp.2001.48.2.258 Budig MJ, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P204, DOI 10.2307/2657415 Henson KD, 2001, GENDER SOC, V15, P218, DOI 10.1177/089124301015002004 ENSHER EA, 2001, HUMAN RESOURCE DEV Q, V12, P53, DOI DOI 10.1002/1532-1096 Allison P. D., 2001, SAGE U PAPERS SERIES Baxter J, 2000, GENDER SOC, V14, P275, DOI 10.1177/089124300014002004 Reskin BF, 2000, CONTEMP SOCIOL, V29, P319, DOI 10.2307/2654387 Bielby William T., 2000, CONTEMP SOCIOL, V29, P190 De Coster S, 1999, WORK OCCUPATION, V26, P21, DOI 10.1177/0730888499026001003 Padavic I, 1997, GENDER SOC, V11, P682, DOI 10.1177/089124397011005008 Huffman ML, 1997, WORK OCCUPATION, V24, P214, DOI 10.1177/0730888497024002005 Ridgeway CL, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P218, DOI 10.2307/2657301 DiMaggio P, 1997, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V23, P263, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.263 BARON JN, 1994, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V57, P190, DOI 10.2307/2786876 TOMASKOVICDEVEY D, 1993, SOC FORCES, V72, P45, DOI 10.2307/2580159 WILLIAMS CL, 1992, SOC PROBL, V39, P253, DOI 10.1525/sp.1992.39.3.03x0034h PADAVIC I, 1991, SYMB INTERACT, V14, P279, DOI 10.1525/si.1991.14.3.279 Acker J, 1990, GENDER SOC, V4, P139, DOI 10.1177/089124390004002002 Young IM, 1990, JUSTICE POLITICS DIF TIENDA M, 1987, AM J SOCIOL, V93, P141, DOI 10.1086/228709 SWIDLER A, 1986, AM SOCIOL REV, V51, P273, DOI 10.2307/2095521 BIELBY WT, 1986, AM J SOCIOL, V91, P759, DOI 10.1086/228350 Blalock Hubert M, 1982, RACE ETHNIC RELATION FELSTINER WLF, 1981, LAW SOC REV, V15, P631 BARON JN, 1980, AM SOCIOL REV, V45, P737, DOI 10.2307/2094893 Blau P.M, 1977, INEQUALITY HETEROGEN Kanter R. M., 1977, MEN WOMEN CORPORATIO FRISBIE WP, 1977, AM J SOCIOL, V82, P1007, DOI 10.1086/226427 PFEFFER J, 1977, ADMIN SCI QUART, V22, P553, DOI 10.2307/2392400 Blalock H., 1967, THEORY MINORITY GROU Blau P.M, 1964, EXCHANGE POWER SOCIA Allport G. W., 1954, NATURE PREJUDICE HODSON R, DIGNITY WORK NR 67 TC 3 Z9 3 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD JUN PY 2011 VL 89 IS 4 BP 1165 EP 1188 PG 24 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 766VN UT WOS:000290814800004 ER PT J AU Burgard, SA AF Burgard, Sarah A. TI The Needs of Others: Gender and Sleep Interruptions for Caregivers SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID TIME USE SURVEY; SEX-DIFFERENCES; WORK; POPULATION; DISRUPTION; DEPRESSION; DURATION; INSOMNIA; MOTHERS; QUALITY AB Received wisdom, some sociological theory and a handful of qualitative studies suggest that the "night shift" of caregiving work that interrupts sleep is a burden borne disproportionately by women. However, there is no broadly representative evidence to substantiate claims about who takes the night shift in contemporary American households. Analyses using data from the nationally-representative 2003-2007 American Time Use Surveys show that net of age, paid work commitment, partnership status and the presence and age of dependents, working mothers were significantly and substantially more likely to get up for the night shift than working fathers. These results suggest that the sleeping hours, which make up a third of every day, are an understudied but important site for micro-level processes that reflect and reproduce gender stratification. C1 Univ Michigan, Dept Sociol, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA. RP Burgard, SA (reprint author), Univ Michigan, Dept Sociol, 500 S State St, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA EM burgards@umich.edu CR Maume DJ, 2010, GENDER SOC, V24, P746, DOI 10.1177/0891243210386949 Krueger PM, 2009, AM J EPIDEMIOL, V169, P1052, DOI 10.1093/aje/kwp023 Chatzitheochari S, 2009, WORK EMPLOY SOC, V23, P30, DOI 10.1177/0950017008099776 Arber S, 2009, SOC SCI MED, V68, P281, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.10.016 MAUME DJ, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P898 BURGARD SA, 2009, 09693 PSC Novati A, 2008, SLEEP, V31, P1579 Venn S, 2008, BRIT J SOCIOL, V59, P79, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-4446.2007.00183.x Rieker Patricia P., 2008, GENDER HLTH EFFECTS Sander K, 2007, HUM BRAIN MAPP, V28, P1007, DOI 10.1002/hbm.20333 Basner M, 2007, SLEEP, V30, P1085 StataCorp, 2007, STAT STAT SOFTW REL ARBER S, 2007, SOCIOLOGICAL RES ONL VENN S, 2007, SOCIOLOGICAL RES ONL Lauderdale DS, 2006, AM J EPIDEMIOL, V164, P5, DOI 10.1093/aje/kwj199 Zhang B, 2006, SLEEP, V29, P85 Abraham KG, 2006, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V70, P676, DOI 10.1093/poq/nfl037 Spiegel K, 2005, J APPL PHYSIOL, V99, P2008, DOI 10.1152/japplphysiol.00660.2005 Sayer LC, 2005, SOC FORCES, V84, P285, DOI 10.1353/sof.2005.0126 Hale L, 2005, J PUBLIC HEALTH, V27, P205, DOI 10.1093/pubmed/fdi004 Chen YY, 2005, J EPIDEMIOL COMMUN H, V59, P488, DOI 10.1136/jech.2004.020511 Dzaja A, 2005, J PSYCHIATR RES, V39, P55, DOI 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2004.05.008 Kutner NG, 2004, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V45, P99 Gay Caryl L, 2004, Biol Res Nurs, V5, P311, DOI 10.1177/1099800403262142 Hislop J, 2003, SOCIOLOGY, V37, P695, DOI 10.1177/00380385030374004 Bittman M, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P186, DOI 10.1086/378341 Mattingly MJ, 2003, SOC FORCES, V81, P999, DOI 10.1353/sof.2003.0036 Hochschild A., 2003, 2 SHIFT Piccinelli M, 2000, BRIT J PSYCHIAT, V177, P486, DOI 10.1192/bjp.177.6.486 Bianchi SM, 2000, SOC FORCES, V79, P191, DOI 10.2307/2675569 Fox GL, 2000, FAM RELAT, V49, P123 BIANCHI SM, 2000, POPULATION B, V55, P1 Allen SM, 1999, J MARRIAGE FAM, V61, P199, DOI 10.2307/353894 Aldous J, 1998, J MARRIAGE FAM, V60, P809, DOI 10.2307/353626 Fein SB, 1998, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V88, P1042, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.88.7.1042 Lindberg E, 1997, SLEEP, V20, P381 Hochschild A.R., 1997, TIME BIND WORK BECOM Robinson J. P., 1997, TIME LIFE SURPRISING FERBER R, 1995, PRINCIPLES PRACTICE, P79 Becker G. S., 1991, TREATISE FAMILY BIDDLE JE, 1990, J POLIT ECON, V98, P922, DOI 10.1086/261713 HORNE JA, 1988, SLEEP, V11, P528 West C, 1987, GENDER SOC, V1, P125, DOI 10.1177/0891243287001002002 Hochschild A, 1983, MANAGED HEART NR 44 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD JUN PY 2011 VL 89 IS 4 BP 1189 EP 1215 PG 27 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 766VN UT WOS:000290814800005 ER PT J AU Cavanagh, SE AF Cavanagh, Shannon E. TI Early Pubertal Timing and the Union Formation Behaviors of Young Women SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID UNITED-STATES; REPRODUCTIVE STRATEGY; COHABITING UNIONS; COHABITATION; GIRLS; MARRIAGE; TRANSITION; ADULTHOOD; SEXUALITY; MENARCHE AB This study examined whether the transition into adolescence, proxied by pubertal timing, shaped the transition into adulthood, proxied by union formation behaviors, among contemporary American women. In a sample drawn from Add Health (n = 7,523), early maturing girls reported an accelerated transition to marriage and cohabitation in young adulthood, net of family structure history, academic achievement in high school, and parental education. The link between pubertal timing and cohabitation was strongest among socioeconomically advantaged women; no socio-economic differences were identified for marriage. The tendency for early maturers to have more pronounced romantic orientations during adolescence partially explained their transitions to marriage. In all, the persistence of the pubertal timing effect into young adulthood suggests that early maturers accelerated entrance into the romantic market in adolescence has a cascading, long-term impact on the shape of their lives in young adulthood. C1 Univ Texas Austin, Dept Sociol, Austin, TX 78712 USA. RP Cavanagh, SE (reprint author), Univ Texas Austin, Dept Sociol, 1 Univ Stn A1700, Austin, TX 78712 USA EM scavanagh@austin.utexas.edu CR Belsky J, 2010, DEV PSYCHOL, V46, P120, DOI 10.1037/a0015549 RALEY RK, 2010, EARLY FAMILY FORMATI Hamilton L, 2009, GENDER SOC, V23, P589, DOI 10.1177/0891243209345829 Lichter DT, 2008, J MARRIAGE FAM, V70, P861 Uecker JE, 2008, J MARRIAGE FAM, V70, P835 Kennedy S, 2008, DEMOGR RES, V19, P1663 Harris K. M., 2008, NATL LONGITUDINAL ST Fields J., 2008, RISKY LESSONS SEX ED MEIER A, 2008, SOCIAL CLASS TRANSIT, P25 Raley RK, 2007, J MARRIAGE FAM, V69, P1210, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2007.00442.x Schoen R, 2007, DEMOGRAPHY, V44, P807, DOI 10.1353/dem.2007.0044 Cavanagh SE, 2007, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V70, P186 Attewell P., 2007, PASSING TORCH DOES H Buchmann C, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P515 Hirschman C., 2006, SEXUALITY RES SOCIAL, V3, P8, DOI 10.1525/srsp.2006.3.4.8 Graber JA, 2006, NEW DIR CHILD ADOLES, V112, P23, DOI 10.1002/cd.160 GERSTEL N, 2006, CONTEXTS, V5, P16 FURSTENBERG FF, 2006, DIVERGING DEV NOT SO THORNTON A, 2006, MARRIAGE COHABITATIO Settersten R. A., 2005, FRONTIER ADULTHOOD T FUSSELL E, 2005, FRONTIER ADULTHOOD T, P76 FIELDS J, 2005, AM FAMILIES LIVING A Heuveline P, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P1214, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00088.x Ellis BJ, 2004, PSYCHOL BULL, V130, P920, DOI 10.1037/0033-2909.130.6.920 Sassler S, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P491, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2004.00033.x Cavanagh SE, 2004, J RES ADOLESCENCE, V14, P285, DOI 10.1111/j.1532-7795.2004.00076.x Lareau A., 2004, UNEQUAL CHILDHOODS C MOUW T, 2004, FRONTIER ADULTHOOD T, P256 MACPHERSON P, 2004, WHITE READINGS POWER, P175 Haynie DL, 2003, SOC FORCES, V82, P355, DOI 10.1353/sof.2003.0093 Furman W, 2003, ADOLESCENT ROMANTIC REALTIONS AND SEXUAL BEHAVIOR: THEORY, RESEARCH, AND PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS, P3 Manning WD, 2002, J FAM ISSUES, V23, P1065, DOI 10.1177/019251302237303 Heaton TB, 2002, J FAM ISSUES, V23, P392, DOI 10.1177/0192513X02023003004 Casper L. M., 2002, CONTINUITY CHANGE AM Raghunathan TE, 2002, IVEWARE IMPUTATION V Raley RK, 2001, DEMOGRAPHY, V38, P59, DOI 10.1353/dem.2001.0008 Mahay J., 2001, SEX LOVE HLTH AM PRI, P197 LICHTER D, 2001, OUT WEDLOCK CAUSES C, P217 Smock PJ, 2000, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V26, P1, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.26.1.1 GIROUX H, 2000, STEALING INNOCENCE Y Brines J, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P333, DOI 10.2307/2657490 Brown B. B., 1999, DEV ROMANTIC RELATIO, P291 ELDER, 1998, HDB CHILD PSYCHOL, V1, P939 Roberts Dorothy, 1997, KILLING BLACK BODY R Brumberg Joan Jacobs, 1997, BODY PROJECT INTIMAT Luker K., 1997, DUBIOUS CONCEPTIONS Ge XJ, 1996, CHILD DEV, V67, P3386, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8624.1996.tb01919.x Martin K. A., 1996, PUBERTY SEXUALITY SE Graber J. A., 1996, TRANSITIONS ADOLESCE, P23 Manning WD, 1995, DEMOGRAPHY, V32, P509, DOI 10.2307/2061671 Eder Donna, 1995, SCH TALK GENDER ADOL LEE J, 1994, GENDER SOC, V8, P343, DOI 10.1177/089124394008003004 Laumann EO, 1994, SOCIAL ORG SEXUALITY HOOKS B, 1992, BLACK LOOK RACE REPR BELSKY J, 1991, CHILD DEV, V62, P647, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8624.1991.tb01558.x Stattin H., 1990, PUBERTAL MATURATION Eccles J. S., 1989, RES MOTIVATION ED, V3, P139 UDRY JR, 1988, AM SOCIOL REV, V53, P709, DOI 10.2307/2095817 CATE RM, 1988, HDB PERSONAL RELATIO, P409 SIMON W, 1986, ARCH SEX BEHAV, V15, P97, DOI 10.1007/BF01542219 THORNE B, 1986, SOC PROBL, V33, P176, DOI 10.1525/sp.1986.33.3.03a00020 COLLINS WA, 1984, DEV MIDDLE CHILDHOOD KOFF E, 1978, DEV PSYCHOL, V14, P635, DOI 10.1037/0012-1649.14.6.635 Jessor R, 1977, PROBLEM BEHAV PSYCHO MARSHALL WA, 1969, ARCH DIS CHILD, V44, P291 DUNPHY DC, 1963, SOCIOMETRY, V26, P230, DOI 10.2307/2785909 NR 66 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD JUN PY 2011 VL 89 IS 4 BP 1217 EP 1238 PG 22 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 766VN UT WOS:000290814800006 ER PT J AU Johnson, MK Mortimer, JT AF Johnson, Monica Kirkpatrick Mortimer, Jeylan T. TI Origins and Outcomes of Judgments about Work SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID JOB VALUES; OCCUPATIONAL VALUES; VALUE TRAJECTORIES; SEX-DIFFERENCES; UNITED-STATES; YOUNG-ADULTS; TRANSITION; GENDER; SOCIALIZATION; ADOLESCENCE AB We evaluate the importance of judgments about work for the attainment process in the "new economy." Findings show continuing links between social origins and work orientations at age 21/22, as well as significant effects of work orientations on occupational outcomes at age 31/32. Higher socio-economic status background, and stronger self-perceived ability, are tied to weaker extrinsic orientations. Young women are more intrinsically oriented than young men. Stronger intrinsic orientations predict holding jobs that offer more intrinsic rewards, self-direction and security. Stronger extrinsic orientations predict higher biweekly earnings (largely via work hours), but not more prestigious, better paying or more secure jobs. Judgments about work, and especially intrinsic orientations, thus remain important precursors of occupational attainments, despite economic turbulence and change in the transition to adulthood. C1 [Johnson, Monica Kirkpatrick] Washington State Univ, Dept Sociol, Pullman, WA 99164 USA. [Mortimer, Jeylan T.] Univ Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA. RP Johnson, MK (reprint author), Washington State Univ, Dept Sociol, POB 644020, Pullman, WA 99164 USA EM monicakj@wsu.edu CR Johnson MK, 2010, WORK OCCUPATION, V37, P194, DOI 10.1177/0730888410365973 FREDERICK C, 2010, CROSSWALK USING PRE2 SCHOON I, 2009, TRANSITIONS SCH WORK MacLeod Jay, 2009, AINT NO MAKIN IT ASP BACHMAN JG, 2009, MONITORING FUTURE QU Goyette KA, 2008, SOC SCI RES, V37, P461, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2008.02.002 Shanahan M., 2008, BIOGRAPHY SOCIOLOGIC *NAT CTR ED STAT, 2008, 2008031 NCES Staff J, 2007, SOC FORCES, V85, P1169, DOI 10.1353/sof.2007.0057 Fullerton AS, 2007, SOC SCI RES, V36, P201, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2005.09.005 Reynolds JR, 2006, SOC PROBL, V53, P186, DOI 10.1525/sp.2006.53.2.186 Lemieux T, 2006, AM ECON REV, V96, P195, DOI 10.1257/000282806777211667 ELDER, 2006, HDB CHILD PSYCHOL TH, P665 SKAGGS BC, 2005, RES SOCIOLOGY WORK, P123 Risman BJ, 2004, GENDER SOC, V18, P429, DOI 10.1177/0891243204265349 Arnett J. J., 2004, EMERGING ADULTHOOD W BRUCKNER H, 2004, ADV LIFE COURSE RES, P27 Halaby CN, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P251, DOI 10.2307/1519768 Settersten Jr R. A., 2003, INVITATION LIFE COUR ELDER, 2003, HDB LIFE COURSE, P3 Johnson MK, 2002, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V45, P113, DOI 10.1525/sop.2002.45.2.113 Johnson MK, 2002, SOC FORCES, V80, P1307, DOI 10.1353/sof.2002.0028 Kerckhoff A. C., 2002, CHANGING ADOLESCENT, P52, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511613913.004 Johnson MK, 2001, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V64, P297, DOI 10.2307/3090156 Johnson MK, 2001, WORK OCCUPATION, V28, P315, DOI 10.1177/0730888401028003004 Kalleberg AL, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P256, DOI 10.2307/2657440 Shanahan MJ, 2000, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V26, P667, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.26.1.667 JOHNSON MK, 2000, WORK FAMILY RES INFO, P215 Schneider B., 1999, AMBITIOUS GENERATION Muthen B. O., 1998, MPLUS USERS GUIDE Miech RA, 1996, SOCIOL EDUC, V69, P237, DOI 10.2307/2112731 Mortimer JT, 1996, SOC FORCES, V74, P1405, DOI 10.2307/2580356 Mortimer J. T., 1996, GENERATING SOCIAL ST, P17 Marini MM, 1996, SOCIOL EDUC, V69, P49, DOI 10.2307/2112723 MARTIN JK, 1993, SOC SCI QUART, V74, P884 JUDGE TA, 1992, J APPL PSYCHOL, V77, P261, DOI 10.1037//0021-9010.77.3.261 LOSCOCCO KA, 1989, WORK OCCUPATION, V16, P3, DOI 10.1177/0730888489016001001 BRIDGES JS, 1989, SEX ROLES, V20, P205, DOI 10.1007/BF00287992 Buchmann M, 1989, SCRIPT LIFE MODERN S JENCKS C, 1988, AM J SOCIOL, V93, P1322, DOI 10.1086/228903 STEVENS G, 1987, SOC SCI RES, V16, P74, DOI 10.1016/0049-089X(87)90019-6 ANDERSON KL, 1985, WORK OCCUPATION, V12, P307, DOI 10.1177/0730888485012003004 LINDSAY P, 1984, AM J SOCIOL, V89, P918, DOI 10.1086/227950 MORTIMER JT, 1982, SOCIOL QUART, V23, P3, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1982.tb02216.x HERZOG AR, 1982, SOCIOL EDUC, V55, P1, DOI 10.2307/2112606 LEUPTOW LB, 1980, SOCIAL PSYCHOL Q, V43, P48 MORTIMER JT, 1979, AM J SOCIOL, V84, P1361, DOI 10.1086/226938 Bourdieu P., 1977, OUTLINE THEORY PRACT KALLEBERG AL, 1977, AM SOCIOL REV, V42, P124, DOI 10.2307/2117735 Sewell W., 1975, ED OCCUPATION EARNIN KERCKHOFF AC, 1974, AMBITION ATTAINMENT Kohn M., 1969, CLASS CONFORMITY STU KOHN ML, 1969, AM SOCIOL REV, V34, P659, DOI 10.2307/2092303 BACHMAN JG, 1967, YOUTH TRANSITIONS, V1 DAVIS JA, 1965, UNDERGRADUATE CAREER Herzberg F, 1959, MOTIVATION WORK ROSENBERG M, 1957, OCCUPATIONS VALUES Maslow A, 1954, MOTIVATION PERSONALI Weber M., 1947, THEORY SOCIAL EC ORG Mead G. H, 1934, MIND SELF SOC NR 60 TC 1 Z9 1 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD JUN PY 2011 VL 89 IS 4 BP 1239 EP 1260 PG 22 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 766VN UT WOS:000290814800007 ER PT J AU Hall, M Farkas, G AF Hall, Matthew Farkas, George TI Adolescent Cognitive Skills, Attitudinal/Behavioral Traits and Career Wages SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID LABOR-MARKET; EARNINGS; GENDER; RACE; DISCRIMINATION; MEN; ACHIEVEMENT; SOCIOLOGY; RETURNS; WOMEN AB We use panel data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY79) to estimate the effects of cognitive skills (measured by the Armed Forces Qualification Test) and attitudinal/behavioral traits (a latent factor based on self-reported self-esteem, locus of control, educational aspirations and educational expectations) on career wage trajectories of white, black and Latino/a men and women. We find that both cognitive and attitudinal/behavioral traits affect initial wages and wage growth, above and beyond their effects on schooling and transcript-reported high school grades. The relative size of these effects, however, varies by race/ethnicity. We also show that black and Latino men, and black women have substantially flatter wage trajectories than white men and women. Using wage decomposition techniques, we find that the lower wages of these groups are partially, but not fully, accounted for by group differences in cognitive skill and attitudinal/behavioral traits. C1 [Hall, Matthew] Univ Illinois, Chicago, IL USA. [Farkas, George] Univ Calif Irvine, Irvine, CA USA. RP Hall, M (reprint author), Inst Govt & Publ Affairs, 815 W Van Buren,Suite 525, Chicago, IL 60607 USA EM mshall@uic.edu CR Pager D, 2009, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V621, P70, DOI 10.1177/0002716208324628 Hall M, 2008, DEMOGRAPHY, V45, P619 Greenman E, 2008, SOC FORCES, V86, P1217 Pager D, 2008, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V34, P181, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.33.040406.131740 *CTR HUM RES RES, 2008, NLSY79 US GUID 1979 Duncan GJ, 2007, FUTURE CHILD, V17, P143, DOI 10.1353/foc.2007.0015 Morris EW, 2007, YOUTH SOC, V38, P490, DOI 10.1177/0044118X06296778 Roscigno V. J., 2007, FACE DISCRIMINATION Heckman JJ, 2006, J LABOR ECON, V24, P411, DOI 10.1086/504455 Groves MO, 2005, J ECON PSYCHOL, V26, P827, DOI 10.1016/j.joep.2005.03.001 Tomaskovic-Devey D, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P58 Duncan G, 2005, UNEQUAL CHANCES: FAMILY BACKGROUND AND ECONOMIC SUCCESS, P23 CARNIERO P, 2005, HDB EMPLOYMENT DISCR, P99, DOI 10.1007/1-4020-3455-5_5 Singer J. D., 2003, APPL LONGITUDINAL DA Waldinger R., 2003, OTHER HALF WORKS IMM Lareau A., 2003, UNEQUAL CHILDHOODS C Browne I, 2003, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V29, P487, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.29.010202.100016 Raudenbush S.W., 2002, HIERARCHICAL LINEAR Bowles S, 2001, J ECON LIT, V39, P1137, DOI 10.1257/jel.39.4.1137 Heckman JJ, 2001, AM ECON REV, V91, P145, DOI 10.1257/aer.91.2.145 Dunifon R, 2001, AM ECON REV, V91, P150, DOI 10.1257/aer.91.2.150 Moss PI, 2001, STORIES EMPLOYERS TE Rosenbaum James, 2001, COLL ALL CAREER PATH HECKMAN JJ, 2000, SECURING FUTURE INVE, P47 Browne I., 1999, LATINAS AFRICAN AM W, P302 England Paula, 1999, Latinas and African American women at work, P139 CARD D, 1999, HDB LABOR EC, V3, P1802 Dunifon R, 1998, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V61, P33, DOI 10.2307/2787056 Jencks C., 1998, BLACK WHITE TEST SCO Duncan GJ, 1998, RES LABOR E, V17, P123 Goldsmith AH, 1997, ECON INQ, V35, P815 Schoeni RF, 1997, J HUM RESOUR, V32, P683, DOI 10.2307/146426 Farkas G, 1997, SOC FORCES, V75, P913, DOI 10.2307/2580524 Neal DA, 1996, J POLIT ECON, V104, P869, DOI 10.1086/262045 Gilens M, 1996, AM POLIT SCI REV, V90, P593, DOI 10.2307/2082611 Farkas G, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P557, DOI 10.2307/2096392 Holzer Harry J., 1996, WHAT EMPLOYERS WANT Wilson W.J., 1996, WORK DISAPPEARS WORL KILBOURNE BS, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V100, P689, DOI 10.1086/230578 Herrnstein R., 1994, BELL CURVE England Paula, 1992, COMP WORTH THEORIES KIRSCHENMAN J, 1991, URBAN UNDERCLASS, P203 STEINBERG RJ, 1990, WORK OCCUPATION, V17, P449, DOI 10.1177/0730888490017004004 ONEILL J, 1990, J ECON PERSPECT, V4, P25 MICKELSON RA, 1990, SOCIOL EDUC, V63, P44, DOI 10.2307/2112896 FARKAS G, 1988, IND FIRMS JOBS SOCIO, P93 U.S. Department of Defense, 1982, PROF AM YOUTH 1980 N KALLEBERG AL, 1979, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V5, P351, DOI 10.1146/annurev.so.05.080179.002031 Jencks C., 1979, WHO GETS AHEAD Bowles S., 1976, SCH CAPITALIST AM Sewell W., 1975, ED OCCUPATION EARNIN MINCER J, 1974, SCH EXPERIENCES EARN SPENCE M, 1973, Q J ECON, V87, P355, DOI 10.2307/1882010 Herrnstein R, 1973, IQ MERITOCRACY Doeringer P., 1971, INTERNAL LABOR MARKE JENSEN AR, 1969, HARVARD EDUC REV, V39, P1 Becker G.S., 1964, HUMAN CAPITAL THEORE NR 57 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD JUN PY 2011 VL 89 IS 4 BP 1261 EP 1285 PG 25 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 766VN UT WOS:000290814800008 ER PT J AU Clarke, P Marshall, V House, J Lantz, P AF Clarke, Philippa Marshall, Victor House, James Lantz, Paula TI The Social Structuring of Mental Health over the Adult Life Course: Advancing Theory in the Sociology of Aging SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID OLDER-ADULTS; AGE; DEPRESSION; RETIREMENT; COHORT; GERONTOLOGY; GENDER; STRATIFICATION; DIVERSITY; ECONOMY AB The sociology of aging draws on a broad array of theoretical perspectives from several disciplines, but rarely has it developed its own. We build on past work to advance and empirically test a model of mental health framed in terms of structural theorizing and situated within the life course perspective. Whereas most prior research has been based on cross-sectional data, we utilize four waves of data from a nationally representative sample of American adults (Americans' Changing Lives Study) collected prospectively over a 15-year period and find that education, employment and marital status, as well as their consequences for income and health, effectively explain the increase in depressive symptoms after age 65. We also found significant cohort differences in age trajectories of mental health that were partly explained by historical increases in education. We demonstrate that a purely structural theory can take us far in explaining later life mental health. C1 [Clarke, Philippa] Univ Michigan, Inst Social Res, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 USA. [Marshall, Victor] Univ N Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC USA. RP Clarke, P (reprint author), Univ Michigan, Inst Social Res, 426 Thompson St, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 USA EM pjclarke@umich.edu CR Ferraro KF, 2009, GERONTOLOGIST, V49, P333, DOI 10.1093/geront/gnp034 FERRARO KF, 2009, HDB THEORIES AGING, P573 Pai M, 2007, RES AGING, V29, P436, DOI 10.1177/0164027507304084 Yang Y, 2007, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V48, P16 Archer M., 2007, MAKING OUR WAY WORLD MARSHALL VW, 2007, ENCY GERONTOLOGY, P621, DOI 10.1016/B0-12-370870-2/00188-8 HOUSE JS, 2007, AM CHANGING LIVES WA WILSON A, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V112, P1886 Feng D, 2006, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V61, pS323 O'Rand A. M., 2006, HDB AGING SOCIAL SCI, P145, DOI 10.1016/B978-012088388-2/50012-2 Walker A, 2005, AGEING SOC, V25, P815, DOI 10.1017/S0144686X05004307 Riolo SA, 2005, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V95, P998, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.2004.047225 CLARKE P, 2005, ADV LIFE COURSE RES, V9, P271 MARSHALL VW, 2005, INTERDISCIPLINARY PE, P57 HOUSE J, 2005, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, P15 HUGHES ME, 2004, AM PEOPLE CENSUS 200, P2000 BRUCKNER H, 2004, GENDER INEQUALITY LI Sarkisian CA, 2003, J GEN INTERN MED, V18, P1001, DOI 10.1111/j.1525-1497.2003.30215.x Singer J. D., 2003, APPL LONGITUDINAL DA MARSHALL VW, 2003, SOCIAL DYNAMICS LIFE, P3 ELDER, 2003, INVITATION LIFE COUR, P49 Olfson M, 2002, JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC, V287, P203, DOI 10.1001/jama.287.2.203 Padavic I., 2002, WOMEN MEN WORK Raghunathan TE, 2002, IVEWARE IMPUTATION V Marshall VW, 2001, RES AGING, V23, P379, DOI 10.1177/0164027501234001 Schieman S, 2001, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V42, P80, DOI 10.2307/3090228 Raghunathan TE, 2001, SURV METHODOL, V27, P85 McMullin JA, 2000, GERONTOLOGIST, V40, P517 Abbott A, 2000, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V29, P3, DOI 10.1177/0049124100029001001 Miech RA, 2000, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V41, P162, DOI 10.2307/2676303 Williams D. R., 1999, HDB STUDY MENTAL HLT, P295 Leisering L., 1999, TIME POVERTY W WELFA O'Rand A. M., 1999, AGE INEQUALITY DIVER BOOTH A, 1999, TRANSITIONS ADULTHOO GEORGE LK, 1999, HDB SOCIOLOGY MENTAL, P565, DOI 10.1007/0-387-36223-1_27 ATCHLEY RC, 1999, SELF SOC AGING PROCE, P94 Bengtson VL, 1997, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V52, pS72 MAYER KU, 1997, THEORETICAL ADVANCES, P146 Mirowsky J, 1996, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V37, P362, DOI 10.2307/2137263 ORand AM, 1996, GERONTOLOGIST, V36, P230 MARSHALL VW, 1996, HDB AGING SOCIAL SCI, P12 McMullin JA, 1995, CAN J SOCIOL, V20, P529, DOI 10.2307/3341856 Archer M., 1995, REALIST SOCIAL THEOR JACKSON PB, 1995, STRUCTURE LIFE COURS, P55 ARNETT JJ, 1994, J YOUTH ADOLESCENCE, V23, P517, DOI 10.1007/BF01537734 HOUSE JS, 1994, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V35, P213, DOI 10.2307/2137277 LIPSET SM, 1994, SOCIOL FORUM, V9, P199, DOI 10.1007/BF01476362 Riley M. W., 1994, AGE STRUCTURAL LAG ELDER, 1994, PSYCHOL AGING, V9, P5 ELDER, 1994, SOCIAL PSYCHOL Q, V57, P4 RAUDENBUSH SW, 1993, J CONSULT CLIN PSYCH, V61, P941, DOI 10.1037/0022-006X.61.6.941 CALASANTI TM, 1993, J AGING STUD, V7, P133, DOI 10.1016/0890-4065(93)90030-N Kohout F J, 1993, J Aging Health, V5, P179, DOI 10.1177/089826439300500202 MIROWSKY J, 1992, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V33, P187, DOI 10.2307/2137349 SEWELL WH, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1 KESSLER RC, 1992, PSYCHOL AGING, V7, P119, DOI 10.1037//0882-7974.7.1.119 HENDRICKS J, 1992, INT J AGING HUM DEV, V35, P31, DOI 10.2190/9C2P-439B-3986-8APB HENDRICKS J, 1992, INT J HEALTH SERV, V22, P125, DOI 10.2190/N7Y1-98F9-0QAR-V4MM BLAZER D, 1991, J GERONTOL, V46, pM210 ROBERTS RE, 1991, J AGING HEALTH, V3, P66, DOI 10.1177/089826439100300104 HAYWARD MD, 1990, DEMOGRAPHY, V27, P337, DOI 10.2307/2061372 WHEATON B, 1990, AM SOCIOL REV, V55, P209, DOI 10.2307/2095627 Baltes P. B., 1990, SUCCESSFUL AGING PER, P1, DOI DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511665684.003 DEVINEY S, 1988, SOCIOL QUART, V29, P525, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1988.tb01432.x RILEY MW, 1988, HDB SOCIOLOGY, P243 MAYER KU, 1988, SOCIAL STRUCTURES HU, P211 FERRARO KF, 1987, J GERONTOL, V42, P528 RILEY MW, 1987, AM SOCIOL REV, V52, P1, DOI 10.2307/2095388 DANNEFER D, 1987, SOCIOLOGICAL FORUM, V2, P211, DOI 10.1007/BF01124164 KOHLI M, 1986, HUMAN DEV LIFE COURS, P271 WALKER A., 1981, AGEING SOC, V1, P73, DOI 10.1017/S0144686X81000056 Townsend P., 1981, AGEING SOC, V1, P5, DOI 10.1017/S0144686X81000020 Riley M. W, 1979, AGING BIRTH DEATH, P3 HOGAN DP, 1978, AM SOCIOL REV, V43, P573, DOI 10.2307/2094780 RADLOFF L S, 1977, Applied Psychological Measurement, V1, P385, DOI 10.1177/014662167700100306 Rosow I., 1976, HDB AGING SOCIAL SCI, P457 ELDER, 1974, CHILDREN GREAT DEPRE Riley M. W., 1972, AGING SOC, V3 Hughes E. C, 1971, SOCIOLOGICAL EYE SEL RILEY MW, 1971, GERONTOLOGIST, V11, P79 NEUGARTEN BL, 1970, J GERIATR PSYCHIAT, V4, P71 DAWE A, 1970, BRIT J SOCIOL, V21, P207, DOI 10.2307/588409 CAIN, 1964, HDB MODERN SOCIOLOGY, P272 HAVIGHURST RJ, 1963, MIDDLE AGE AGING, P161 Cumming E., 1961, GROWING OLD PROCESS Burgess Ernest W., 1960, AGING W SOC, P3 Linton R, 1936, STUDY MAN NR 87 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD JUN PY 2011 VL 89 IS 4 BP 1287 EP 1313 PG 27 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 766VN UT WOS:000290814800009 ER PT J AU Kroska, A Harkness, SK AF Kroska, Amy Harkness, Sarah K. TI Coping with the Stigma of Mental Illness: Empirically-Grounded Hypotheses from Computer Simulations SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID MODIFIED LABELING THEORY; SELF-ESTEEM; LIFE SATISFACTION; SCHIZOPHRENIA; DISORDERS; CONSEQUENCES; REJECTION; PEOPLE AB This research demonstrates how affect control theory and its computer program, Interact, can be used to develop empirically-grounded hypotheses regarding the connection between cultural labels and behaviors. Our demonstration focuses on propositions in the modified labeling theory of mental illness. According to the M LT, negative societal conceptions of the mentally ill become personally relevant upon diagnosis and damage psychiatric patients' self-concept. This, in turn, increases patients' use of three coping behaviors: concealing treatment history, educating others about mental illness and withdrawing from social interaction. We evaluate these propositions by analyzing data generated from Interact simulations that incorporate self-meaning data gathered from psychiatric patients. We produce six general principles about the way patients' stigma sentiments (evaluation, potency and activity associated with the cultural category "a mentally ill person") and diagnostic category (adjustment, affective, schizophrenic) jointly shape patients' predicted use of these coping behaviors. C1 [Kroska, Amy] Univ Oklahoma, Dept Sociol, Norman, OK 73019 USA. [Harkness, Sarah K.] Stanford Univ, Stanford, CA 94305 USA. RP Kroska, A (reprint author), Univ Oklahoma, Dept Sociol, Kaufman Hall 331, Norman, OK 73019 USA EM amykroska@ou.edu CR HEISE DR, 2010, SURVEYING CULTURES D Schroder T, 2009, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V72, P180 Kroska A, 2008, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V71, P193 Lysaker PH, 2007, SCHIZOPHRENIA BULL, V33, P192, DOI 10.1093/schbul/sbl016 van 't Wout M, 2007, COMPR PSYCHIAT, V48, P27, DOI 10.1016/j.comppsych.2006.07.003 Heise DR, 2007, EXPRESSIVE ORDER: CONFIRMING SENTIMENTS IN SOCIAL ACTIONS, P3 Howard J, 2006, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V69, P307 Kroska A, 2006, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V69, P325 Hasson-Ohayon Ilanit, 2006, Compr Psychiatry, V47, P265, DOI 10.1016/j.comppsych.2005.08.006 FRANCIS CA, 2006, MEAN AFFECTIVE RATIN Hebl MR, 2005, PERS SOC PSYCHOL REV, V9, P156, DOI 10.1207/s15327957pspr0902_4 Link BG, 2001, PSYCHIATR SERV, V52, P1621, DOI 10.1176/appi.ps.52.12.1621 Wright ER, 2000, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V41, P68, DOI 10.2307/2676361 Markowitz FE, 1998, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V39, P335, DOI 10.2307/2676342 Rosenfield S, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P660, DOI 10.2307/2657432 GOODWIN D, 1996, PSYCHIAT DIAGNOSIS MacKinnon N., 1994, SYMBOLIC INTERACTION LINK BG, 1991, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V32, P302, DOI 10.2307/2136810 AMADOR XF, 1991, SCHIZOPHRENIA BULL, V17, P113 LINK BG, 1989, AM SOCIOL REV, V54, P400, DOI 10.2307/2095613 Ebaugh H., 1988, BECOMING EX PROCESS SMITHLOVIN L, 1988, ADV AFFECT CONTROL T SMITHLOVIN L, 1988, ANAL SOCIAL INTERACT, P35 HEISE DR, 1988, ANAL SOCIAL INTERACT, P133 LINK BG, 1987, AM SOCIOL REV, V52, P96, DOI 10.2307/2095395 ROMNEY AK, 1986, AM ANTHROPOL, V88, P313, DOI 10.1525/aa.1986.88.2.02a00020 Heise D. R, 1979, UNDERSTANDING EVENTS Osgood C.E., 1975, CROSS CULTURAL UNIVE NR 28 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD JUN PY 2011 VL 89 IS 4 BP 1315 EP 1339 PG 25 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 766VN UT WOS:000290814800010 ER PT J AU Schieman, S Glavin, P AF Schieman, Scott Glavin, Paul TI Education and Work-Family Conflict: Explanations, Contingencies and Mental Health Consequences SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID LABOR-FORCE; STRESS; GENDER; JOB; INTEGRATION; WORKPLACE; RESOURCES; SPILLOVER; OUTCOMES; DEMANDS AB Using data from a representative sample of American workers, we examine the association between education and work-family conflict-a form of inter-role conflict in which role pressures from each domain are incompatible in some way. The well-educated tend to occupy professional jobs with more income and pressures, and experience more work-family role blurring activities. These conditions contribute to greater conflict among the well-educated. In addition, people with less than a high school degree report more conflict because of their experience in precarious work with variable shifts. Finally, work-family conflict is associated with distress-but less so among those with the highest and lowest education. We discuss the theoretical relevance of these findings for views about social status, stress exposure, and their implications for mental health. C1 [Schieman, Scott] Univ Toronto, Dept Sociol, Toronto, ON M5S 2J4, Canada. RP Schieman, S (reprint author), Univ Toronto, Dept Sociol, 725 Spadina Ave, Toronto, ON M5S 2J4, Canada EM scott.schieman@utoronto.ca CR Schieman S, 2009, SOC SCI MED, V69, P1616, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.08.038 Schieman S, 2008, SOC PROBL, V55, P590, DOI 10.1525/sp.2008.55.4.590 Schieman S, 2008, SOC FORCES, V87, P153 Schieman S, 2008, WORK OCCUPATION, V35, P296, DOI 10.1177/0730888408322448 Golden L, 2008, J FAMILY EC ISSUES, V29, P86, DOI 10.1007/s10834-007-9090-7 DUXBURY L, 2008, HDB WORK FAMILY INTE, P125, DOI 10.1016/B978-012372574-5.50010-7 MULLEN J, 2008, HDB WORK FAMILY INTE, P191, DOI 10.1016/B978-012372574-5.50014-4 Avison WR, 2007, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V48, P301 Bakker A. B., 2007, J MANAGERIAL PSYCHOL, V22, P309, DOI DOI 10.1108/02683940710733115 Voydanoff Patricia, 2007, WORK FAMILY COMMUNIT Park J, 2007, PERSPECTIVES LABOUR, V8, P5 Schieman S, 2006, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V47, P242 Olson-Buchanan JB, 2006, J VOCAT BEHAV, V68, P432, DOI 10.1016/j.jvb.2005.10.006 Mennino SF, 2005, SOCIOL QUART, V46, P107 Byron K, 2005, J VOCAT BEHAV, V67, P169, DOI 10.1016/j.jvb.2004.08.009 Voydanoff P, 2005, J OCCUP HEALTH PSYCH, V10, P491, DOI 10.1037/1076-8998.10.4.491 Winslow S, 2005, J FAM ISSUES, V26, P727, DOI 10.1177/0192513X05277522 Desrochers S, 2005, J FAM ISSUES, V26, P442, DOI 10.1177/0192513X04272438 Reynolds J, 2005, RES SOCIOL WORK, V15, P33, DOI 10.1016/S0277-2833(05)15003-1 Totterdell P, 2005, HDB WORK STRESS, P35 Bellavia Gina M., 2005, HDB WORK STRESS, P113 VALCOUR MP, 2005, WORK LIFE INTEGRATIO, P61 Bakker AB, 2004, WORK OCCUPATION, V31, P345, DOI 10.1177/0730888404266349 Jacobs J. A., 2004, TIME DIVIDE WORK FAM Batt R, 2003, IND RELAT, V42, P189, DOI 10.1111/1468-232X.00287 Mirowsky J., 2003, ED SOCIAL STATUS HLT Mirowsky J., 2003, SOCIAL CAUSES PSYCHO Blair-Loy M., 2003, COMPETING DEVOTIONS Bond J. T., 2003, HIGHLIGHTS 2002 NATL Grosswald B., 2003, J SOCIOL SOCIAL WELF, V30, P31 Grzywacz JG, 2002, FAM RELAT, V51, P28, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3729.2002.00028.x Maume DJ, 2001, AM BEHAV SCI, V44, P1137, DOI 10.1177/00027640121956692 Golden L, 2001, MON LABOR REV, V124, P50 Tausig M., 2001, J FAMILY EC ISSUES, V22, P101, DOI 10.1023/A:1016626028720 Kerckhoff AC, 2001, SOCIOL EDUC, V74, P1, DOI 10.2307/2673142 McLeod J. D., 1999, HDB SOCIOLOGY MENTAL, P321, DOI 10.1007/0-387-36223-1_16 Lewis S, 1999, J Occup Health Psychol, V4, P382, DOI 10.1037//1076-8998.4.4.382 Pearlin LI, 1999, HDB SOCIOLOGY MENTAL, P395, DOI 10.1007/0-387-36223-1_19 Wheaton Blair, 1999, HDB SOCIOLOGY MENTAL, P277, DOI 10.1007/0-387-36223-1_14 KELLOWAY KE, 1999, J OCCUP HEALTH, V4, P337 Ross CE, 1998, WORK OCCUPATION, V25, P333, DOI 10.1177/0730888498025003004 Hochschild A. R., 1997, TIME BIND GRUSKY DB, 1990, DEMOGRAPHY, V27, P617, DOI 10.2307/2061574 GREENHAUS JH, 1985, ACAD MANAGE REV, V10, P76, DOI 10.2307/258214 WHEATON B, 1985, RES COMMUNITY MENTAL, P139 KARASEK RA, 1979, ADMIN SCI QUART, V24, P285, DOI 10.2307/2392498 NR 46 TC 1 Z9 1 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD JUN PY 2011 VL 89 IS 4 BP 1341 EP 1362 PG 22 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 766VN UT WOS:000290814800011 ER PT J AU Hawdon, J Ryan, J AF Hawdon, James Ryan, John TI Social Relations that Generate and Sustain Solidarity after a Mass Tragedy SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article AB Numerous researchers discuss the solidarity-producing effects of crime, natural disasters and mass tragedies; however, there is much we do not understand about the processes involved in the phenomena. We specify the social relationships that generate and sustain solidarity by building on Hunter's descriptions of the private, parochial and public spheres of community. We argue that event-specific parochial and event-specific public activities generate solidarity after heinous crimes. However, general parochial activities, such as attending local organizational meetings and frequenting local businesses, sustain solidarity. Using longitudinal data collected after the mass murder of 27 students and 5 faculty members on Virginia Tech's campus in 2007, a repeated measures analysis predicting levels of solidarity 5, 9 and 13 months after the tragedy supports our hypotheses. C1 [Hawdon, James] Virginia Tech, Dept Sociol, Blacksburg, VA 24061 USA. RP Hawdon, J (reprint author), Virginia Tech, Dept Sociol, 654 McBryde Hall,MC 0137, Blacksburg, VA 24061 USA EM hawdonj@vt.edu CR Hawdon J, 2010, DEVIANT BEHAV, V31, P679, DOI 10.1080/01639620903415901 Hawdon J, 2009, CRIME DELINQUENCY, V55, P526, DOI 10.1177/0011128708325421 Cullen Dave, 2009, COLUMBINE Kaniasty K., 2009, MENTAL HLTH CONSEQUE, P175 Ryan J., 2008, TRAUMATOLOGY, V14, P43, DOI 10.1177/1534765607312686 *AM ASS PUBL OP RE, 2008, RESP RAT OV BARNSHAW J, 2008, SOLIDARITY TRUMPS CA Tucker C, 2007, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V71, P3, DOI 10.1093/poq/nfl047 Shrum W, 2007, SOC STUD SCI, V37, P97, DOI 10.1177/0306312706069430 Tierney KJ, 2007, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V33, P503, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.33.040406.131743 Ruzek J., 2007, J MENTAL HLTH COUNSE, V29, P17 EYRE A, 2007, HDB DISASTER RES, P441, DOI 10.1007/978-0-387-32353-4_26 *VA TECH REV PAN, 2007, MASS SHOOT VIRG TECH Carroll MS, 2006, RURAL SOCIOL, V71, P261, DOI 10.1526/003601106777789701 Alexander J., 2006, CIVIL SPHERE *DEP HOM SEC, 2006, K HURR DIS WEEKL REP Carroll MS, 2005, SOC NATUR RESOUR, V18, P301, DOI 10.1080/08941920590915224 Savage A, 2005, J BEHAV HEALTH SER R, V32, P199, DOI 10.1007/BF02287267 Fradkin Philip L., 2005, GREAT EARTHQUAKE FIR Harden B., 2005, WASHINGTON POST 1229, pA1 Sommers C. H., 2005, ONE NATION THERAPY H KANIASTY K, 2005, PTSD RES Q, V16, P1 BURLINGAME D, 2005, WALL STREET J Collins R, 2004, SOCIOL THEOR, V22, P53, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9558.2004.00204.x SMELSER NJ, 2004, COLLECTIVE TRAUMA CO Ryang S, 2003, ANTHROPOL QUART, V76, P731, DOI 10.1353/anq.2003.0061 BERESFORD L, 2003, COPING PUBLIC TRAGED, P41 BENKE D, 2003, COPING PUBLIC TRAGED, P191 DOKA K, 2003, COPING TRAGEDY, P179 *CTR ADV HLTH, 2003, REP BER GRIEF RES Klinenberg Eric, 2002, HEAT WAVE SOCIAL AUT Turkel G, 2002, SOCIOL FOCUS, V35, P73 MIKI H, 2002, ANN M INT SOC ASS BR WITTE J, 2002, NAVIGATING PUBLIC OP, P272 GRANELLO PF, 2001, ADULTSPAN J, V3, P12 SAMPSON RJ, 2001, SOCIAL CAPITAL POOR, P89 CAMPBELL C, 2000, RES COMMUNITY SOCIOL, P21 Dillman D., 1999, MAIL INTERNET SURVEY SATEL S, 1999, NY TIMES Sweet S, 1998, INT J MASS EMERGENCI, V16, P321 *CDC, 1998, MEAS VIOL REL ATT BE Ragsdale A.Kathleen, 1997, HURRICANE ANDREW ETH, P20 Morrow Betty Hearn, 1997, HURRICANE ANDREW ETH, P141 Durkheim E, 1995, ELEMENTARY FORMS REL FULTON R, 1995, DYING FACING FACTS, P185 Erikson K. T., 1994, NEW SPECIES TROUBLE McCool S. F., 1994, Journal of Travel Research, V32, P29, DOI 10.1177/004728759403200305 BOLIN R, 1994, HOUSEHOLD COMMUNITY, V56 Solomon Susan D., 1994, P179, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511570162.010 WRIGHT K, 1990, POSTTRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER : ETIOLOGY, PHENOMENOLOGY, AND TREATMENT, P126 Bates F. L., 1987, Disasters and social change, in Sociology of Disasters, P291 PIJAWKA D, 1987, OMEGA, V18, P281 Drabek T. E, 1986, HUMAN SYSTEM RESPONS Hunter A. J., 1985, CHALLENGE SOCIAL CON, P230 Granovetter Mark, 1983, SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY, P201, DOI DOI 10.2307/202051 Erikson K. T, 1976, EVERYTHING ITS PATH QUARANTELLI E, 1976, MASS EMERGENCIES, V1, P39 GRANOVET.MS, 1973, AM J SOCIOL, V78, P1360, DOI 10.1086/225469 DYNES R, 1970, ORGANIZED BEHAV DISA Barton A. H, 1969, COMMUNITIES DISASTER Durkheim E, 1964, DIVISION LABOR SOC NR 61 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD JUN PY 2011 VL 89 IS 4 BP 1363 EP 1384 PG 22 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 766VN UT WOS:000290814800012 ER PT J AU Lewis, VA Emerson, MO Klineberg, SL AF Lewis, Valerie A. Emerson, Michael O. Klineberg, Stephen L. TI Who We'll Live With: Neighborhood Racial Composition Preferences of Whites, Blacks and Latinos SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID FACTORIAL SURVEY ANALYSIS; NEW-YORK-CITY; RESIDENTIAL SEGREGATION; SPATIAL ASSIMILATION; ETHNIC-PREFERENCES; AFRICAN-AMERICANS; URBAN INEQUALITY; GROUP THREAT; RACE MATTER; MULTI-CITY AB The debate about racial residential preferences has two open questions. First, are neighborhood racial preferences truly racial, or is race a proxy for socio-economic factors? Second, are in-group or out-group preferences more salient? Using the Houston Area Survey, we employ a factorial experiment to assess the effect of racial composition on neighborhood desirability independent of crime, school quality and property values. We survey whites, blacks and Hispanics to examine in-group vs. out-group preferences. Results show that independent of proxies, whites find neighborhoods less attractive as the proportion black or Hispanic increases; the proportion Asian has no impact. Racial composition has little effect on Hispanics' and blacks' neighborhood preferences. We find no evidence of in-group preferences; rather, results suggest that whites express negative out-group preferences toward black and Hispanic neighborhoods. C1 [Lewis, Valerie A.] Harvard Univ, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA. [Emerson, Michael O.; Klineberg, Stephen L.] Rice Univ, Houston, TX 77251 USA. RP Lewis, VA (reprint author), Harvard Kennedy Sch Govt, Saguaro Seminar, 79 JFK St,Box 114, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA EM valerie.lewis@gmail.com CR KLINEBERG SL, 2010, CHANGING FACE HOUSTO Krysan M, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P527, DOI 10.1086/599248 Clark WAV, 2009, URBAN AFF REV, V44, P334, DOI 10.1177/1078087408321497 MASSEY DS, 2008, NEW FACES NEW PLACES, P370 Krysan M, 2007, SOC FORCES, V86, P699 Clark WAV, 2007, POPUL RES POLICY REV, V26, P145, DOI 10.1007/s11113-007-9026-9 Clark WAV, 2007, URBAN AFF REV, V42, P295, DOI 10.1177/1078087406292531 Fossett M, 2006, J MATH SOCIOL, V30, P185, DOI 10.1080/0022500500544052 Iceland J, 2006, SOC PROBL, V53, P248, DOI 10.1525/sp.2006.53.2.248 Williams R, 2006, STATA J, V6, P58 Tienda M., 2006, HISPANICS FUTURE AM Shlay AB, 2005, EARLY CHILD RES Q, V20, P393, DOI 10.1016/j.ecresq.2005.10.002 KLINEBERG S, 2005, PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS R STREETMAN A, 2005, HOUSTON TIMELINE BROWN CM, 2004, WHATS YOUR FAVORITE Charles CZ, 2003, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V29, P167, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.29.010202.100002 Tomz Michael, 2003, CLARIFY SOFTWARE INT Krysan M, 2002, SOC PROBL, V49, P521, DOI 10.1525/sp.2002.49.4.521 Quillian L, 2002, SOC SCI RES, V31, P197, DOI 10.1006/ssre.2001.0726 Clark WAV, 2002, URBAN GEOGR, V23, P237, DOI 10.2747/0272-3638.23.3.237 Ihlanfeldt KR, 2002, J URBAN ECON, V51, P366, DOI 10.1006/juec.2001.2249 Krysan M, 2002, SOC FORCES, V80, P937, DOI 10.1353/sof.2002.0011 Emerson MO, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P922, DOI 10.2307/3088879 Rosenbaum E, 2001, DEMOGRAPHY, V38, P337, DOI 10.2307/3088349 Harris DR, 2001, SOC SCI RES, V30, P100, DOI 10.1006/ssre.2000.0695 Logan John R., 2001, ETHNIC DIVERSITY GRO CHARLES CZ, 2001, URBAN INEQUALITY EVI, P217 Alba RD, 2000, SOC FORCES, V79, P587, DOI 10.2307/2675510 King G, 2000, AM J POLIT SCI, V44, P347, DOI 10.2307/2669316 Meyer S. G., 2000, LONG THEY DONT MOVE Ellen I. G., 2000, SHARING AM NEIGHBORH McWhorter J., 2000, LOSING RACE SELF SAB Massey DS, 1999, SOC SCI RES, V28, P316, DOI 10.1006/ssre.1999.0660 Harris DR, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P461, DOI 10.2307/2657496 Alba RD, 1999, AM SOCIOL REV, V64, P446, DOI 10.2307/2657495 Kim DY, 1999, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V22, P581, DOI 10.1080/014198799329431 Krysan M, 1998, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V62, P506, DOI 10.1086/297859 Farley R, 1997, HOUS POLICY DEBATE, V8, P763 Yoon I.J., 1997, MY OWN KOREAN BUSINE PATTERSON O, 1997, ORDEAL INTEGRATION P THERNSTROM S, 1997, AM BLACK WHITE Zubrinsky CL, 1996, SOC SCI RES, V25, P335, DOI 10.1006/ssre.1996.0016 Quillian L, 1996, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P816, DOI 10.1086/230998 Logan JR, 1996, SOC FORCES, V74, P851, DOI 10.2307/2580384 Bobo L, 1996, SOC FORCES, V74, P883, DOI 10.2307/2580385 Min Pyong Gap, 1996, CAUGHT MIDDLE KOREAN QUILLIAN L, 1995, AM SOCIOL REV, V60, P586, DOI 10.2307/2096296 FARLEY R, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V100, P750, DOI 10.1086/230580 FARLEY R, 1994, AM SOCIOL REV, V59, P23, DOI 10.2307/2096131 Clogg C. C., 1994, STAT MODELS ORDINAL Massey DS, 1993, AM APARTHEID FARLEY R, 1993, J HOUSING RES, V4, P1 CLARK WAV, 1992, DEMOGRAPHY, V29, P451, DOI 10.2307/2061828 ALBA RD, 1991, DEMOGRAPHY, V28, P431, DOI 10.2307/2061466 HUNTER C, 1991, SEX ROLES, V24, P725, DOI 10.1007/BF00288209 CLARK WAV, 1991, DEMOGRAPHY, V28, P1, DOI 10.2307/2061333 Galster G, 1990, J PLAN EDUC RES, V9, P165, DOI 10.1177/0739456X9000900302 MASSEY DS, 1989, DEMOGRAPHY, V26, P373, DOI 10.2307/2061599 CLARK WAV, 1988, POPUL RES POLICY REV, V7, P113, DOI 10.1007/BF00125463 CLARK WAV, 1986, POPUL RES POLICY REV, V5, P95, DOI 10.1007/BF00137176 DURHAM AM, 1986, J QUANTITATIVE CRIMI, V2, P181, DOI 10.1007/BF01074579 MASSEY DS, 1984, AM J SOCIOL, V89, P836, DOI 10.1086/227946 Taub R. P., 1984, PATHS NEIGHBORHOOD C Rossi P. H., 1982, MEASURING SOCIAL JUD, P15 FREY WH, 1979, AM SOCIOL REV, V44, P425, DOI 10.2307/2094885 Farley Reynolds, 1978, SOC SCI RES, V7, P319, DOI 10.1016/0049-089X(78)90017-0 SCHELLING TC, 1971, J MATH SOCIOL, V1, P143 Blalock H., 1967, THEORY MINORITY GROU BLUMER H, 1958, PAC SOCIOL REV, V1, P3 BLALOCK HM, 1957, AM SOCIOL REV, V22, P677, DOI 10.2307/2089197 Hughes EC, 1945, AM J SOCIOL, V50, P353, DOI 10.1086/219652 NR 71 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD JUN PY 2011 VL 89 IS 4 BP 1385 EP 1407 PG 23 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 766VN UT WOS:000290814800013 ER PT J AU Menard, S AF Menard, Scott TI Standards for Standardized Logistic Regression Coefficients SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID INDEPENDENT VARIABLES; MULTIPLE REGRESSION; PROBABILITIES; EQUATIONS; ODDS AB Standardized coefficients in logistic regression analysis have the same utility as standardized coefficients in linear regression analysis. Although there has been no consensus on the best way to construct standardized logistic regression coefficients, there is now sufficient evidence to suggest a single best approach to the construction of a standardized logistic regression coefficient(1) that can be used in the same way across a broad range of problems as the standardized linear regression coefficient and also to suggest the adequacy of other approaches for limited purposes. This article reviews the state of knowledge regarding the use of standardized coefficients in general and standardized logistic regression coefficients in particular, and makes specific recommendations on how to hest use (and avoid abusing) standardized logistic regression coefficients. C1 Sam Houston State Univ, Coll Criminal Justice, Huntsville, TX 77341 USA. RP Menard, S (reprint author), Sam Houston State Univ, Coll Criminal Justice, Box 2296, Huntsville, TX 77341 USA EM scottmenard@shsu.edu CR HILBE JM, 2009, LOGISTIC REGRESSION Salkind N. J., 2008, USING SPSS WINDOWS M Muthen LK, 2007, MPLUS STAT ANAL LATE Roncek DW, 2006, SOC SCI QUART, V87, P731, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-6237.2006.00406.x KUPEK E, 2006, LOGISTIC REGRESSION Smith Tom W., 2005, GEN SOCIAL SURVEYS 1 KUPEK E, 2005, STRUCTURAL EQUATION, V12, P35 Menard S, 2004, AM STAT, V58, P218, DOI 10.1198/000313004X946 Cohen Patricia, 2003, APPL MULTIPLE REGRES DEMARIS A, 2002, SOCIOLOGICAL METHODS, V31, P22 Menard S, 2001, JUSTICE Q, V18, P269, DOI 10.1080/07418820100094901 ESHIMA N, 2001, J JAPANESE STAT SOC, V31, P1 Allison PD, 1999, LOGISTIC REGRESSION Long J. Scott, 1997, REGRESSION MODELS CA RONCEK D, 1997, 1997 ANN M AM SOC CR Kaufman RL, 1996, SOC SCI QUART, V77, P90 Agresti A., 1996, INTRO CATEGORICAL DA Menard S., 1995, APPL LOGISTIC REGRES SAS Institute Inc, 1995, LOG REGR EX US SAS S MUTHEN BO, 1995, TESTING STRUCTURAL E, P205 DEMARIS A, 1993, SOC FORCES, V71, P1057, DOI 10.2307/2580130 RONCEK DW, 1993, SOC FORCES, V71, P1067, DOI 10.2307/2580131 Bollen K. A., 1993, TESTING STRUCTURAL E, P111 RONCEK DW, 1992, AM SOCIOL REV, V57, P503, DOI 10.2307/2096097 RONCEK DW, 1991, SOC FORCES, V70, P509, DOI 10.2307/2580251 Huizinga David, 1989, MULTIPLE PROBLEM YOU Bohrnstedt G. W., 1988, STAT SOCIAL DATA ANA Joreskog K. G., 1988, PRELIS PROGRAM MULTI Agresti A., 1986, STAT METHODS SOCIAL KVALSETH TO, 1985, AM STAT, V39, P279, DOI 10.2307/2683704 BROWNE MW, 1984, BRIT J MATH STAT PSY, V37, P62 WINSHIP C, 1983, AM J SOCIOL, V89, P54, DOI 10.1086/227834 Achen CH, 1982, INTERPRETING USING R KIM JO, 1981, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V10, P187 Fienberg S. E., 1980, ANAL CROSS CLASSIFIE Knoke D, 1980, LOG LINEAR MODELS STOLZENBERG RM, 1979, SOCIOL METHODOL, P459 MAYER LS, 1976, J AM STAT ASSOC, V71, P154, DOI 10.2307/2285760 Duncan Otis Dudley, 1975, INTRO STRUCTURAL EQU HEISE DR, 1975, CAUSAL ANAL GOODMAN LA, 1972, AM SOCIOL REV, V37, P28, DOI 10.2307/2093491 DUNCAN OD, 1971, CAUSAL MODELS SOCIAL, P115 BLALOCK, 1971, CAUSAL MODELS SOCIAL, P139 COHEN J, 1968, PSYCHOL BULL, V70, P426, DOI 10.1037/h0026714 NR 44 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV NORTH CAROLINA PRESS PI CHAPEL HILL PA BOX 2288, JOURNALS DEPT, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2288 USA SN 0037-7732 J9 SOC FORCES JI Soc. Forces PD JUN PY 2011 VL 89 IS 4 BP 1409 EP 1428 PG 20 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 766VN UT WOS:000290814800014 ER PT J AU Fourcade, M AF Fourcade, Marion TI Cents and Sensibility: Economic Valuation and the Nature of "Nature" SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID CONTINGENT VALUATION; UNITED-STATES; OIL-SPILL; FRANCE; COMPENSATION; MARKETS; LAW AB How do we attribute a monetary value to intangible things? This article offers a general sociological approach to this question, using the economic value of nature as a paradigmatic case, and oil spills litigations in France and the United States as real world empirical illustrations. It suggests that a full-blown sociology of economic valuation must solve three problems: the "why," which refers to the general place of money as a metric for worth; the "how," which refers to the specific techniques and arguments laymen and experts deploy to elicit monetary translations; and the "then what" or the feedback loop from monetary values to social practices and representations. C1 Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Sociol, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA. RP Fourcade, M (reprint author), Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Sociol, 410 Barrows Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA EM Fourcade@berkeley.edu CR ITOPF (International Tanker Owners Pollution Federation Limited), 2011, OIL SPILLS STAT Karpik L., 2010, VALUING UNIQUE EC SI Gillis Justin, 2010, NY TIMES 0608 Vidal John, 2010, OBSERVER 0530 Beckert Jens, 2010, 104 MAX PLANCK I STU Fourcade Marion, 2010, ANN M AM SOC ASS ATL Callon M., 2009, ACTING UNCERTAIN WOR Stark D, 2009, SENSE OF DISSONANCE: ACCOUNTS OF WORTH IN ECONOMIC LIFE, P1 Fourcade M, 2009, PRINC STUD CULT, P1 Mukerji Chandra, 2009, IMPOSSIBLE ENG TECHN Gibson William, 2009, REENCHANTED WORLD QU Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council, 2009, STAT REP Hunt Joe, 2009, MISSION MAP POLITICS Direction des Etudes Economiques et de l'Evaluation Environnementale, 2008, 15 DIR ET EC EV ENV Smith CW, 2007, CAN J SOCIOL, V32, P1 Bartley T, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P297, DOI 10.1086/518871 Espeland WN, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P1, DOI 10.1086/517897 Almeling R, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P319 Jasanoff S, 2007, ISIS, V98, P344, DOI 10.1086/518194 Mukerji C, 2007, SOC STUD SCI, V37, P227, DOI 10.1177/0306312706063785 Igo Sarah E., 2007, AVERAGED AM SURVEYS MARX K, 2007, EC PHILOS MANUSCRIPT BECKERT J, 2007, INHERITED WEALTH Hay Julien, 2007, J ACCIDENTS CATA NOV, V78 Boltanski L, 2006, JUSTIFICATION EC WOR MacKenzie D., 2006, ENGINE NOT CAMERA Healy K, 2006, LAST BEST GIFTS ALTR Bonnieux Francois, 2006, EVALUATION EC PREJUD Latour B., 2005, REASSEMBLING SOCIAL Rodgers Jr. William H., 2005, ALASKA L REV, V22, P135 OTT R, 2005, SOUND TRUTH CORPORAT Wolf Peter M. Wolf, 2005, PURCHASE INTIMACY Berezin M, 2005, HANDBOOK OF ECONOMIC SOCIOLOGY, SECOND EDITION, P109 Pritchard SB, 2004, FR HIST STUD, V27, P765, DOI 10.1215/00161071-27-4-765 Sagoff M., 2004, PRICE PRINCIPLE ENV Godard Olivier, 2004, CAHIERS EC POLITIQUE, V2, P127 Satz Debra, 2004, GLOBALIZATION CULTUR, P11 Golan Tal, 2004, LAWS MAN LAWS NATURE Arzel Alphone, 2004, PROCES AMOCO CADIZ Ackerman Franck, 2004, PRICELESS HUMAN HLTH Smith V. Kerry, 2004, INT YB ENV RESOURCE, P1 Peterson CH, 2003, SCIENCE, V302, P2082, DOI 10.1126/science.1084282 Bruszt L, 2003, E EUR POLIT SOC, V17, P74, DOI 10.1177/0888325402239685 Velthuis O, 2003, THEOR SOC, V32, P181, DOI 10.1023/A:1023995520369 Bess Michael, 2003, LIGHT GREEN SOC ECOL McCammon Molly, 2003, C ISS CONC INC TANK Ofiara DD, 2002, MAR POLLUT BULL, V44, P96, DOI 10.1016/S0025-326X(01)00263-6 Weber Max, 2002, PROTESTANT ETHIC SPI Sunstein C., 2002, COST BENEFIT STATE F Lamont Michele, 2002, DIGNITY WORKING MEN SUNSTEIN CASS, 2002, PUNITIVE DAMAGES JUR Thompson D, 2002, ENV L, V32, P57 Beamish Thomas, 2002, SILENT SPILL ORG IND WHITESIDE K, 2002, DIVIDED NATURES FREN Bonnieux Francois, 2002, EC STAT, V357, P173 Tropman John E., 2002, CATHOLIC ETHIC SPIRI Kagan R. A., 2001, ADVERSARIAL LEGALISM Durkheim E., 2001, ELEMENTARY FORMS REL Hoffman Andrew, 2001, HERESY DOGMA I HIST Nash R. F., 2001, WILDERNESS AM MIND Brans Edward H. P., 2001, LIABILITY DAMAGE PUB Chapman DJ, 2001, LAW AND ECONOMICS OF THE ENVIRONMENT, P319 Loomis JB, 2000, J WATER RES PL-ASCE, V126, P339, DOI 10.1061/(ASCE)0733-9496(2000)126:6(339) Sen A, 2000, J LEGAL STUD, V29, P931, DOI 10.1086/468100 de Tocqueville A, 2000, DEMOCRACY AM Lamont M., 2000, RETHINKING COMP CULT Thevenot L., 2000, RETHINKING COMP CULT, P229, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511628108.009 Feldman EA, 2000, LAW SOC REV, V34, P651, DOI 10.2307/3115140 Wolf Peter M. Wolf, 2000, LAW SOCIAL INQUIRY, V25, P817 Saguy AC, 2000, LAW SOC REV, V34, P1091, DOI 10.2307/3115132 Heinich Nathalie, 2000, RETHINKING COMP CULT, P170, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511628108.007 Hacking I, 1999, SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION Ekelund R. B., 1999, SECRET ORIGINS MODER Bateman I. J., 1999, VALUING ENV PREFEREN Keeble John, 1999, OUT CHANNEL EXXON VA DESROSIERES A, 1999, POLITICS LARGE NUMBE Picou J. Steven, 1999, EXXON VALDEZ DISASTE Carruthers BG, 1998, AM BEHAV SCI, V41, P1384, DOI 10.1177/0002764298041010003 Heller MA, 1998, HARVARD LAW REV, V111, P621, DOI 10.2307/1342203 Callon M, 1998, LAWS OF THE MARKETS, P1 Espeland WN, 1998, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V24, P313, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.24.1.313 Espeland W. N, 1998, STRUGGLE WATER POLIT Hecht G., 1998, RADIANCE FRANCE NUCL de Tocqueville Alexis, 1998, OLD REGIME FRENCH RE Hecht G, 1997, FR HIST STUD, V20, P381, DOI 10.2307/286851 RUNTE A, 1997, NATL PARKS AM EXPERI Mukerji C., 1997, TERRITORIAL AMBITION Radin M. J., 1996, CONTESTED COMMODITIE Willinger Mark, 1996, NATURE SCI SOC, V4, P6 Porter T. M., 1995, TRUST NUMBERS PURSUI Jasanoff S, 1995, SCI BAR LAW SCI TECH Biernacki R., 1995, FABRICATION LABOR GE Cronon W, 1995, UNCOMMON GROUND, P23 PORTNEY PR, 1994, J ECON PERSPECT, V8, P3 HANEMANN WM, 1994, J ECON PERSPECT, V8, P19 DIAMOND PA, 1994, J ECON PERSPECT, V8, P45 Veblen Thorstein, 1994, THEORY LEISURE CLASS Dobbin Frank, 1994, FORGING IND POLICY Coase Ronald H., 1994, ESSAYS EC EC, P34 Lascoumes Pierre, 1994, LECOPOUVOIR ENV POLI Latour Bruno, 1994, POLITICS NATURE BRIN Wolf Peter M. Wolf, 1994, SOCIAL MEANING MONEY Hausman J.A., 1993, CONTINGENT VALUATION Arrow KJ, 1993, FED REGISTER, V58, P4602 De Raulin Arnaud, 1993, J DROIT INT, V120, P41 Odriozola Miguel J. D., 1993, THESIS U CHICAGO LAW Lamont M, 1992, MONEY MORALS MANNERS Brown G, 1992, REPLACEMENT COSTS BI CARSON RT, 1992, CONTINGENT VALUATION Henry Jean-Baptiste, 1992, FRERES COTE Cambridge Economics Inc., 1992, CONT VAL CRIT ASS P Cronon William, 1991, NATURES METROPOLIS C Marx Karl, 1990, CAPITAL, V1 Huglo Christian, 1990, REPARATION DOMMAGES, P146 LUECK D, 1989, J LEGAL STUD, V18, P291, DOI 10.1086/468149 Feder Barnaby J., 1989, NY TIMES 1119 Latour B, 1987, SCI ACTION FOLLOW SC Selvin Molly, 1987, THIS TENDER DELICATE KOPYTOFF Igor, 1986, SOCIAL LIFE THINGS C, P64 Kula W., 1986, MEASURES MEN Drell Adrienne, 1986, CHICAGO SUN TIM 0728 Assaf George B., 1986, MARINE RESOURCE EC, V2, P211 Barraque Bernard, 1985, PAYSAGE ADM Wolf Peter M. Wolf, 1985, PRICING PRICELESS CH Durkheim Emile, 1984, DIVISION LABOR SOC NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration), 1983, ASS SOC COSTS OIL SP Gorz Andre, 1983, ECOLOGY POLITICS Cohen PatriciaCline, 1982, CALCULATING PEOPLE S SETAME (Societe d'etudes d'amenagement d'urbanisme et d'environnement), 1982, AM CAD REST LITT EST Wolf Peter M. Wolf, 1981, LAND AM ITS VALUE US Ouest-France, 1980, OUEST FRANCE 0403 Bonnieux Francois, 1980, IMPACT SOCIOECONOMIQ Zelizer V., 1979, MORALS MARKETS DEV L Simmel G, 1978, PHILOS MONEY Chasse Claude, 1978, PUBLICATIONS CNEXO A, V6, P115 MOLOTCH H, 1975, AM J SOCIOL, V81, P235, DOI 10.1086/226073 KRUTILLA J, 1967, AM ECON REV, V56, P777 Schumpeter Joseph A., 1954, INT EC PAPERS, P5 Samuelson PA, 1938, ECONOMICA-NEW SER, V5, P61, DOI 10.2307/2548836 Hanemann W. Michael, WATER RESOURCE UNPUB NR 140 TC 1 Z9 1 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD MAY PY 2011 VL 116 IS 6 BP 1721 EP 1777 DI 10.1086/659640 PG 57 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 790QH UT WOS:000292603800001 ER PT J AU Paul, AM AF Paul, Anju Mary TI Stepwise International Migration: A Multistage Migration Pattern for the Aspiring Migrant SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID DOMESTIC WORKERS; WISE MIGRATION; LABOR-MARKETS; OUTMIGRATION; IMMIGRANTS; NETWORKS; SETTLERS; POLITICS; ORIGINS; REGIMES AB High cost barriers and immigration policy restrictions prevent many low-capital migrants from realizing their destination preferences. However, interviews with 95 Filipino domestic workers in the Philippines, Hong Kong, and Singapore reveal how these low-capital migrants can intentionally follow a stepwise international migration trajectory, working their way up a hierarchy of destination countries and accumulating sufficient migrant capital in the process so as to eventually gain legal entry into their preferred destinations, often in the West. Such a trajectory differs from more frequently studied migration patterns in its number of stages, duration, intentionality, hierarchical progression, and dynamic nature. C1 Univ Michigan, Dept Sociol, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA. RP Paul, AM (reprint author), Univ Michigan, Dept Sociol, 500 S State St, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA EM anjupaul@umich.edu CR PAUL AM, 2011, DIFFERENTIATED UNPUB PAUL AM, 2011, ETHNIC RACIAL STUDIE, V34 *CIT IMM CAN, 2010, OP B, V192 *PHIL OV EMPL AG, 2010, 2008 OV EMPL STAT Tyner JA, 2009, GLOB REALITIES, P1 *NAT WAG PROD COMM, 2009, CURR STAT WAG Kuang EMM, 2008, SOC SCI INFORM, V47, P643, DOI 10.1177/0539018408096452 Sassen S, 2008, AM BEHAV SCI, V52, P457, DOI 10.1177/0002764208325312 Aydemir A, 2008, CAN J ECON, V41, P1285 Garip F, 2008, DEMOGRAPHY, V45, P591, DOI 10.1353/dem.0.0016 *OECD, 2008, INT MOB HIGHL SKILL HATTON T, 2008, 577 AUSTR NAT U King KM, 2007, INT MIGR REV, V41, P909, DOI 10.1111/j.1747-7379.2007.00105.x Carling J, 2007, INT MIGR, V45, P3, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-2435.2007.00418.x RATHA D., 2007, 102 WORLD BANK Gold Steve, 2007, CITIZENSHIP THOSE WH, P283 BIAO X, 2007, BODY SHOPPING INDIAN *CIT IMM CAN, 2007, LIV IN CAR PROGR EZQUERRA S, 2007, PHILIPPINE J 3 WORLD, V22, P117 TAKENAKA A, 2007, SECONDARY MIGRATION Lan P. C., 2006, GLOBAL CINDERELLAS M MARTIN PL, 2006, MANAGING MIGRATION P Asis M.M.B., 2006, PHILIPPINES CULTURE CASTLES S, 2006, BACK FUTURE CAN EURO CASTILLO MA, 2006, MEXICO CAUGHT US CEN BALDWINEDWARDS M, 2006, REV AFRICAN POLITICA, V33, P311, DOI 10.1080/03056240600843089 RAY D, 2006, UNDERSTANDING POVERT, P409 Korinek K, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P779 Curran SR, 2005, SOC FORCES, V84, P225, DOI 10.1353/sof.2005.0094 Kapur D., 2005, GIVE US YOUR BEST BR Siu Lok, 2005, MEMORIES FUTURE HOME *AIMPC, 2005, INT MIGR FIL P ROUND ASIS MMB, 2005, PREPARING WORK ABROA Ball RE, 2004, WOMEN STUD INT FORUM, V27, P119, DOI 10.1016/j.wsif.2004.06.003 Castles S, 2004, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V27, P205, DOI 10.1080/0141987042000177306 Appadurai A., 2004, CULTURE PUBLIC ACTIO, P59 Cornelius W.A., 2004, CONTROLLING IMMIGRAT Calavita K, 2004, CONTROLLING IMMIGRAT, P345 Tyner James, 2004, MADE PHILIPPINES GEN CORNELIUS WA, 2004, CONTROLLING IMMIGRAT, P387 Ossman S, 2004, INT MIGR, V42, P111, DOI 10.1111/j.0020-7985.2004.00297.x BOUBAKRI H, 2004, REG C MIGR TRANS COU Rudolph C, 2003, AM POLIT SCI REV, V97, P603 Curran SR, 2003, DEMOGRAPHY, V40, P289, DOI 10.2307/3180802 Cheng SJA, 2003, GENDER SOC, V17, P166, DOI 10.1177/0891243202250717 Castles S., 2003, AGE MIGRATION INT PO HUANG S, 2003, ASIAN PAC MIGR J, V12, P75 Andreas P., 2003, REBORDERING N AM INT Stasiulis DK, 2003, NEGOTIATING CITIZENSHIP: MIGRANT WOMEN IN CANADA AND THE GLOBAL SYSTEM, P1 GIBNEY MJ, 2003, 200368 WORLD I DEV E Carling J., 2002, J ETHN MIGR STUD, V28, P5, DOI 10.1080/13691830120103912 Mary Romero, 2002, MAID US DEVORETZ DJ, 2002, CANADIAN STUDIES POP, V29, P53 *OECD, 2002, INT MIGR OUTL 2002 HATTON TJ, 2002, 9159 NAT BUR EC RES Parrenas R. S., 2001, SERVANTS GLOBALIZATI Icduygu A, 2000, INT SOC SCI J, V52, P357, DOI 10.1111/1468-2451.00265 Skeldon R, 2000, INT SOC SCI J, V52, P369, DOI 10.1111/1468-2451.00266 Kanaiaupuni SM, 2000, SOC FORCES, V78, P1311, DOI 10.2307/3006176 Anthias Floya, 2000, GENDER MIGRATION SO STALKER P, 2000, WORKERS FRONTIERS IM CORNELIUS WA, 2000, 220 IZA I STUD LAB Konadu-Agyemang K, 1999, CAN GEOGR-GEOGR CAN, V43, P400, DOI 10.1111/j.1541-0064.1999.tb01397.x Tsuda T, 1999, J ASIAN STUD, V58, P687, DOI 10.2307/2659116 Pratt G, 1999, ECON GEOGR, V75, P215, DOI 10.2307/144575 Waters M., 1999, BLACK IDENTITIES W I Singer A, 1998, INT MIGR REV, V32, P561, DOI 10.2307/2547764 Alexander JT, 1998, SOC SCI HIST, V22, P349, DOI 10.2307/1171529 Yeoh BSA, 1998, URBAN STUD, V35, P583, DOI 10.1080/0042098984925 Portes A, 1998, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V24, P1, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.24.1.1 Massey DS, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P939, DOI 10.1086/231037 Constable N., 1997, MAID ORDER HONG KONG Malmberg G, 1997, INT MIGRATION IMMOBI, P21 Bakan Abigail Bess, 1997, NOT ONE FAMILY FOREI Hall S., 1997, REPRESENTATIONS CULT Pratt G, 1997, GENDER PLACE CULT, V4, P159 RIMONTE N, 1997, FILIPINO AM TRANSFOR, P39 Lam KC, 1996, APPL ECON, V28, P1167, DOI 10.1080/000368496328001 Waldinger R, 1996, STILL PROMISED CITY Espiritu Yen Le, 1995, FILIPINO AM LIVES LAM KC, 1994, CAN J ECON, V27, P352, DOI 10.2307/135751 SPAAN E, 1994, INT MIGR REV, V28, P93, DOI 10.2307/2547027 PORTES A, 1992, RACIAL ETHNIC STUDIE, V15, P491 CHAVEZ LR, 1991, AM ETHNOL, V18, P257, DOI 10.1525/ae.1991.18.2.02a00040 Rouse Roger C., 1995, Critique of Anthropology, V15, P351 EELENS F, 1990, INT MIGR REV, V24, P297, DOI 10.2307/2546553 BOYD M, 1989, INT MIGR REV, V23, P638, DOI 10.2307/2546433 SASSEN S, 1989, WORLD POLICY J, V6, P811 Takaki R, 1989, STRANGERS DIFFERENT CONWAY D, 1980, INT MIGR REV, V14, P3, DOI 10.2307/2545058 DAHYA B, 1973, RACE, V14, P241, DOI 10.1177/030639687301400302 RIDDELL JB, 1972, ECON GEOGR, V48, P270, DOI 10.2307/142908 Siu PCP, 1952, AM J SOCIOL, V58, P34, DOI 10.1086/221070 Ravenstein Ernst, 1885, J ROYAL STATISTICAL, V48, P167, DOI 10.2307/2979181 NR 94 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD MAY PY 2011 VL 116 IS 6 BP 1842 EP 1886 DI 10.1086/659641 PG 45 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 790QH UT WOS:000292603800003 ER PT J AU DiMaggio, P Garip, F AF DiMaggio, Paul Garip, Filiz TI How Network Externalities Can Exacerbate Intergroup Inequality SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION; CUMULATIVE CAUSATION; SOCIAL CONTAGION; DIFFUSION; TIES; MODELS; STRATIFICATION; ORGANIZATION; SEGREGATION; ATTAINMENT AB The authors describe a common but largely unrecognized mechanism that produces and exacerbates intergroup inequality: the diffusion of valuable practices with positive network externalities through social networks whose members differentially possess characteristics associated with adoption. The authors examine two cases: the first, to explore the mechanism's implications and, the second, to demonstrate its utility in analyzing empirical data. In the first, the diffusion of Internet use, network effects increase adoption's benefits to associates of prior adopters. An agent-based model demonstrates positive, monotonic relationships, given externalities, between homophily bias and intergroup inequality in equilibrium adoption rates. In the second, rural-urban migration in Thailand, network effects reduce risk to persons whose networks include prior migrants. Analysis of longitudinal individual-level migration data indicates that network homophily interacts with network externalities to induce divergence of migration rates among otherwise similar villages. C1 [DiMaggio, Paul] Princeton Univ, Dept Sociol, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA. [Garip, Filiz] Harvard Univ, Dept Sociol, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA. RP DiMaggio, P (reprint author), Princeton Univ, Dept Sociol, 118 Wallace Hall, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA EM dimaggio@princeton.edu CR Garip F, 2010, POPUL RES POLICY REV, V29, P659, DOI 10.1007/s11113-009-9165-2 Currarini S, 2010, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V107, P4857, DOI 10.1073/pnas.0911793107 Tavory I, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P171 VANDERIJT A, 2009, SELECTION INFLUENCE Western B, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P903 Garip F, 2008, DEMOGRAPHY, V45, P591, DOI 10.1353/dem.0.0016 Christakis NA, 2008, NEW ENGL J MED, V358, P2249, DOI 10.1056/NEJMsa0706154 DiMaggio P, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P227 Rossman G, 2008, SOCIOL METHODOL, V38, P201 BUHAI S, 2008, SOCIAL NETWORK ANAL Rindfuss RR, 2007, SOC SCI RES, V36, P374, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2006.03.005 Putnam RD, 2007, SCAND POLIT STUD, V30, P137, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9477.2007.00176.x Buhler C, 2007, EUR SOC, V9, P359, DOI 10.1080/14616690701314101 Salganik MJ, 2006, SCIENCE, V311, P854, DOI 10.1126/science.1121066 McPherson J.M., 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P353 Tilly Charles, 2006, IDENTITIES BOUNDARIE QUILLIAN L, 2006, NATL POVERTY CTR WOR Korinek K, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P779 Curran SR, 2005, SOC FORCES, V84, P225, DOI 10.1353/sof.2005.0094 Hedstrom P., 2005, DISSECTING SOCIAL PR Van den Bulte C, 2004, MARKET SCI, V23, P530, DOI 10.1287/mksc.1040.0054 Klopfenstein K, 2004, ECON EDUC REV, V23, P115, DOI 10.1016/S0272-7757(03)00076-1 Fussell E, 2004, DEMOGRAPHY, V41, P151, DOI 10.1353/dem.2004.0003 DiMaggio Paul, 2004, SOCIAL INEQUALITY DIMAGGIO P, 2004, EC SOCIOLOGY CAPITAL Quillian L, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P540, DOI 10.2307/1519738 Rogers EM, 2003, DIFFUSION INNOVATION Kao G, 2003, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V29, P417, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.29.010202.100019 Bonfadelli H, 2002, EUR J COMMUN, V17, P65 Macy MW, 2002, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V28, P143, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.28.110601.141117 Van den Bulte C, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P1409, DOI 10.1086/320819 McPherson JM, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P415, DOI DOI 10.1146/ANNUREV.S0C.27.1.415) Shy O., 2001, EC NETWORK IND LEIGH A, 2001, PPI POLICY REPORT Portes A, 2000, J LAT AM STUD, V32, P529, DOI 10.1017/S0022216X00005836 Mills Mary Beth, 1999, THAI WOMEN GLOBAL LA Levitt P, 1998, INT MIGR REV, V32, P926, DOI 10.2307/2547666 Bello W., 1998, SIAMESE TRAGEDY DEV Breen R, 1997, RATION SOC, V9, P275, DOI 10.1177/104346397009003002 Massey DS, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V102, P939, DOI 10.1086/231037 Cairncross F., 1997, DEATH DISTANCE COMMU POPIELARZ PA, 1995, AM J SOCIOL, V101, P698, DOI 10.1086/230757 SCHEMENT JR, 1995, TELECOMMUN POLICY, V19, P477, DOI 10.1016/0308-5961(95)00025-2 SOMRUDEE N, 1993, PAC AFF, V66, P167 Fischer C. S, 1992, AM CALLING SOCIAL HI DUNLEVY JA, 1991, GROWTH CHANGE, V22, P54, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-2257.1991.tb00541.x BOOTH A, 1991, SOC FORCES, V70, P207, DOI 10.2307/2580069 STRANG D, 1991, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V19, P324, DOI 10.1177/0049124191019003003 SKVORETZ J, 1990, SOC NETWORKS, V12, P217, DOI 10.1016/0378-8733(90)90006-U MASSEY DS, 1990, POPUL INDEX, V56, P3, DOI 10.2307/3644186 ARTHUR WB, 1989, ECON J, V99, P116, DOI 10.2307/2234208 STARK O, 1989, DEMOGRAPHY, V26, P1, DOI 10.2307/2061490 KATZ ML, 1985, AM ECON REV, V75, P424 FELD SL, 1981, AM J SOCIOL, V86, P1015, DOI 10.1086/227352 LIN N, 1981, AM SOCIOL REV, V46, P393, DOI 10.2307/2095260 BARON JN, 1980, AM SOCIOL REV, V45, P737, DOI 10.2307/2094893 PHONGPAICHIT P, 1980, PAC AFF, V53, P440, DOI 10.2307/2757303 GRANOVETTER M, 1978, AM J SOCIOL, V83, P1420, DOI 10.1086/226707 GRANOVET.MS, 1973, AM J SOCIOL, V78, P1360, DOI 10.1086/225469 BOUDON R, 1973, ED OPPORTUNITY SOCIA SCHELLING TC, 1971, J MATH SOCIOL, V1, P143 White H.C., 1970, CHAINS OPPORTUNITY S LIEBERSON S, 1969, AM SOCIOL REV, V34, P850, DOI 10.2307/2095977 COLEMAN J, 1957, SOCIOMETRY, V20, P253, DOI 10.2307/2785979 SIMON HA, 1957, SOCIOMETRY, V20, P32, DOI 10.2307/2786111 Lazarsfeld P., 1954, FREEDOM CONTROL MODE, P18 Leibenstein H, 1950, Q J ECON, V64, P183, DOI 10.2307/1882692 NR 67 TC 2 Z9 2 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD MAY PY 2011 VL 116 IS 6 BP 1887 EP 1933 DI 10.1086/659653 PG 47 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 790QH UT WOS:000292603800004 ER PT J AU Sharkey, P Elwert, F AF Sharkey, Patrick Elwert, Felix TI The Legacy of Disadvantage: Multigenerational Neighborhood Effects on Cognitive Ability SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID MARGINAL STRUCTURAL MODELS; WEIGHT PREMATURE-INFANTS; NATIONAL CHILD-DEVELOPMENT; SAMPLE SELECTION BIAS; EARLY INTERVENTION; OPPORTUNITY EXPERIMENT; CAUSAL INFERENCE; ADOLESCENT DEVELOPMENT; ACADEMIC-ACHIEVEMENT; DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM AB This study examines how the neighborhood environments experienced over multiple generations of a family influence children's cognitive ability. Building on recent research showing strong continuity in neighborhood environments across generations of family members, the authors argue for a revised perspective on "neighborhood effects" that considers the ways in which the neighborhood environment in one generation may have a lingering impact on the next generation. To analyze multigenerational effects, the authors use newly developed methods designed to estimate unbiased treatment effects when treatments and confounders vary over time. The results confirm a powerful link between neighborhoods and cognitive ability that extends across generations. A family's exposure to neighborhood poverty across two consecutive generations reduces child cognitive ability by more than half a standard deviation. A formal sensitivity analysis suggests that results are robust to unobserved selection bias. C1 [Sharkey, Patrick] NYU, Dept Sociol, New York, NY 10012 USA. [Elwert, Felix] Univ Wisconsin Madison, Dept Sociol, Madison, WI USA. RP Sharkey, P (reprint author), NYU, Dept Sociol, 295 Lafayette St,Room 4102, New York, NY 10012 USA EM patrick.sharkey@nyu.edu CR HONG G, 2010, J EDUC BEHAV STAT, V14, P499 WODTKE G, 2010, NEIGHBORHOOD E UNPUB Briggs XD, 2009, URBAN STUD, V46, P429, DOI 10.1177/0042098008099362 VanderWeele TJ, 2009, EPIDEMIOLOGY, V20, P18, DOI 10.1097/EDE.0b013e31818f69ce LUDWIG J, 2009, NEIGHBORHOOD EFFECTS Sampson RJ, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P189, DOI 10.1086/589843 Clampet-Lundquist S, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P107 Ludwig J, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P144, DOI 10.1086/588741 Sobel ME, 2008, J EDUC BEHAV STAT, V33, P230, DOI 10.3102/1076998607307239 Sampson RJ, 2008, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V105, P845, DOI 10.1073/pnas.0710189104 Sharkey P, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P931, DOI 10.1086/522804 ELWERT F, 2008, ENDOGENOUS SEL UNPUB VOTRUBA ME, 2008, 0803 NAT POV CTR Jackson MI, 2007, SOC SCI RES, V36, P590, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2007.02.002 Alexander KL, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P167 Entwisle B, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V112, P1495, DOI 10.1086/511803 Kling JR, 2007, ECONOMETRICA, V75, P83, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0262.2007.00733.x Morgan Stephen L., 2007, COUNTERFACTUALS CAUS Sobel ME, 2006, J AM STAT ASSOC, V101, P1398, DOI 10.1198/016214506000000636 Wagmiller RL, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P847 Sanbonmatsu L, 2006, J HUM RESOUR, V41, P649 Leventhal T, 2006, CHILD DEV, V77, P1359, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2006.00940.x McCulloch A, 2006, SOC SCI MED, V62, P1865, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2005.08.048 Caughy MO, 2006, AM J COMMUN PSYCHOL, V37, P141, DOI 10.1007/s10464-005-9001-8 Wasik BA, 2006, J EDUC PSYCHOL, V98, P63, DOI 10.1037/0022-0663.98.1.63 MURNANE RJ, 2006, TEACHING NEW BASIC S Auld MC, 2005, HEALTH ECON, V14, P1019, DOI 10.1002/hec.1050 Singh-Manoux A, 2005, AM J EPIDEMIOL, V161, P831, DOI 10.1093/aje/kwi109 Vartanian TP, 2005, SOC SERV REV, V79, P60, DOI 10.1086/426718 Keels M, 2005, DEMOGRAPHY, V42, P51, DOI 10.1353/dem.2005.0005 Downey DB, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P613 Leventhal T, 2004, DEV PSYCHOL, V40, P488, DOI 10.1037/0012-1649.40.4.488 Brumback BA, 2004, STAT MED, V23, P749, DOI 10.1002/sim.1657 Jacob BA, 2004, AM ECON REV, V94, P233, DOI 10.1257/000282804322970788 Royston Patrick, 2004, STATA J, V4, P227 MAINIERI T, 2004, PANEL STUDY INCOME D Harding DJ, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P676, DOI 10.1086/379217 Wheaton B, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P680, DOI 10.2307/1519758 Page ME, 2003, J LABOR ECON, V21, P831, DOI 10.1086/377021 Hill JL, 2003, DEV PSYCHOL, V39, P730, DOI 10.1037/0012-1649.39.4.730 Quillian L, 2003, POPUL RES POLICY REV, V22, P221, DOI 10.1023/A:1026077008571 Kunz J, 2003, ECON LETT, V79, P231, DOI 10.1016/S0165-1765(02)00324-5 Elder Jr. G. H., 2003, HDB LIFE COURSE, P3, DOI 10.1007/978-0-306-48247-2_1 Macintyre S., 2003, NEIGHBORHOODS HLTH, P20 Ellen I. G., 2003, CHOOSING BETTER LIFE, P313 Goering J., 2003, CHOOSING BETTER LIFE LEUVEN E, 2003, STAT SOFTWARE COMPON *GEOLYTICS, 2003, CENSUSCD NEIGHB CHAN Kohen DE, 2002, CHILD DEV, V73, P1844, DOI 10.1111/1467-8624.t01-1-00510 Ainsworth JW, 2002, SOC FORCES, V81, P117, DOI 10.1353/sof.2002.0038 Sampson RJ, 2002, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V28, P443, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.28.110601.141114 Campbell F.A, 2002, APPL DEV SCI, V6, P42, DOI 10.1207/S1532480XADS0601_05 McCulloch A, 2001, SOC SCI MED, V53, P579, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(00)00362-2 Duncan GJ, 2001, DEMOGRAPHY, V38, P437, DOI 10.2307/3088357 Pickett KE, 2001, J EPIDEMIOL COMMUN H, V55, P111, DOI 10.1136/jech.55.2.111 Small ML, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P23, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.27.1.23 DIEZROUX A, 2001, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V97, P344 Guo G, 2000, DEMOGRAPHY, V37, P431, DOI 10.2307/2648070 Robins JM, 2000, EPIDEMIOLOGY, V11, P550, DOI 10.1097/00001648-200009000-00011 Hernan MA, 2000, EPIDEMIOLOGY, V11, P561, DOI 10.1097/00001648-200009000-00012 Leventhal T, 2000, PSYCHOL BULL, V126, P309, DOI 10.1037/0033-2909.126.2.309 Pearl J, 2000, CAUSALITY MODELS REA Shonkoff J., 2000, NEURONS NEIGHBORHOOD Rubinowitz Leonard S., 2000, CROSSING CLASS COLOR Robins JM, 1999, SYNTHESE, V121, P151, DOI 10.1023/A:1005285815569 Quillian L, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P1, DOI 10.1086/210266 Vartanian TP, 1999, SOC SERV REV, V73, P142, DOI 10.1086/514412 Plotnick RD, 1999, SOC SCI QUART, V80, P1 Robins J. M., 1999, STAT MODELS EPIDEMIO, P95 HOFFERTH S, 1999, CHILD DEV SUPPLEMENT Klebanov PK, 1998, CHILD DEV, V69, P1420, DOI 10.2307/1132275 Fitzgerald J, 1998, J HUM RESOUR, V33, P300, DOI 10.2307/146434 Fitzgerald J, 1998, J HUM RESOUR, V33, P251, DOI 10.2307/146433 Robins J. M., 1998, 1997 P AM STAT ASS S, P1 McCarton CM, 1997, JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC, V277, P126, DOI 10.1001/jama.277.2.126 Duncan G. J., 1997, CONSEQUENCES GROWING Jargowsky P, 1997, POVERTY PLACE GHETTO Hauser RM, 1997, SOCIOL METHODOL, V27, P177, DOI 10.1111/1467-9531.271028 Chase-Lansdale L.P., 1997, NEIGHBORHOOD POVERTY, V1, P79 Ellen IG, 1997, HOUS POLICY DEBATE, V8, P833 Aaronson D., 1997, NEIGHBORHOOD POVERTY, V2, P80 Briggs XD, 1997, HOUS POLICY DEBATE, V8, P195 Winship Christopher, 1997, INTELLIGENCE GENES S, P215 Schweinhart LJ, 1997, EARLY CHILD RES Q, V12, P117, DOI 10.1016/S0885-2006(97)90009-0 CORCORAN M, 1997, CONSEQUENCES GROWING, P461 GROSS RT, 1997, HELPING LOW BIRTH WE KLEBANOV PK, 1997, NEIGHBORHOOD POVERTY, V1, P119 Wolfe B, 1996, J AM STAT ASSOC, V91, P970, DOI 10.2307/2291716 Neisser U, 1996, AM PSYCHOL, V51, P77, DOI 10.1037/0003-066X.51.2.77 CHASELANSDALE LP, 1996, CHILD DEV, V67, P3338 BROOKSGUNN J, 1996, CHILD DEV, V67, P3338 BROWN C, 1996, NOTES SEO CENS UNPUB Pearl J, 1995, BIOMETRIKA, V82, P669, DOI 10.1093/biomet/82.4.669 HECKMAN JJ, 1995, J POLIT ECON, V103, P1091, DOI 10.1086/262014 Jacoby Russell, 1995, BELL CURVE DEBATE HI BROOKSGUNN J, 1994, JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC, V272, P1257, DOI 10.1001/jama.272.16.1257 DUNCAN GJ, 1994, CHILD DEV, V65, P296, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8624.1994.tb00752.x CAMPBELL FA, 1994, CHILD DEV, V65, P684, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8624.1994.tb00777.x Herrnstein Richard J., 1994, BELL CURVE INTELLIGE BROOKSGUNN J, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V99, P353, DOI 10.1086/230268 CORCORAN M, 1992, J HUM RESOUR, V27, P575, DOI 10.2307/146076 KAUFMAN JE, 1992, EDUC EVAL POLICY AN, V14, P229, DOI 10.3102/01623737014003229 Hill M., 1992, PANEL STUDY INCOME D WINSHIP C, 1992, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V18, P327, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.18.1.327 WILSON WJ, 1991, AM SOCIOL REV, V56, P1, DOI 10.2307/2095669 Jencks C, 1990, INNER CITY POVERTY U, P111 WOODCOCK RW, 1989, TESTS ACHIEVEMENT ST BECKETTI S, 1988, J LABOR ECON, V6, P472, DOI 10.1086/298192 ROBINS J, 1986, MATH MODELLING, V7, P1393, DOI 10.1016/0270-0255(86)90088-6 ROSENBAUM PR, 1983, J ROY STAT SOC B MET, V45, P212 DUNCAN GJ, 1983, 5000 AM FAMILIES PAT, V10, P218 DATCHER L, 1982, REV ECON STAT, V64, P32, DOI 10.2307/1937940 STEVENS G, 1981, SOC SCI RES, V10, P364, DOI 10.1016/0049-089X(81)90011-9 HECKMAN JJ, 1979, ECONOMETRICA, V47, P153, DOI 10.2307/1912352 MORGAN JN, 1974, 5000 AM FAMILIES PAT, V1 BLAU PM, 1960, AM SOCIOL REV, V25, P178, DOI 10.2307/2092624 NR 116 TC 1 Z9 1 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD MAY PY 2011 VL 116 IS 6 BP 1934 EP 1981 DI 10.1086/660009 PG 48 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 790QH UT WOS:000292603800005 ER PT J AU Sayer, LC England, P Allison, PD Kangas, N AF Sayer, Liana C. England, Paula Allison, Paul D. Kangas, Nicole TI She Left, He Left: How Employment and Satisfaction Affect Women's and Men's Decisions to Leave Marriages SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID MARITAL DISRUPTION; UNITED-STATES; AMERICAN-WOMEN; MARRIED-WOMEN; WIVES INCOME; DIVORCE; GENDER; DISSOLUTION; SEPARATION; HAPPINESS AB Studies examining determinants of divorce have largely ignored differences between factors that elevate wives' and husbands' initiation of divorce. The authors use longitudinal data and a latent class model embedded in a competing-risks event history model to assess distinct predictors of wives and husbands leaving marriages. They find that when men are not employed, either spouse is more likely to leave. When wives report better-than-average marital satisfaction, their employment affects neither spouse's exit. However, when wives report below-average marital satisfaction, their employment makes it more likely they will leave. The authors' findings suggest that theories of divorce require "gendering" to reflect asymmetric gender change. C1 [Sayer, Liana C.] Ohio State Univ, Dept Sociol, Columbus, OH 43210 USA. [Kangas, Nicole] Stanford Univ, Dept Sociol, Stanford, CA 94305 USA. [Allison, Paul D.] Univ Penn, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA. RP Sayer, LC (reprint author), Ohio State Univ, Dept Sociol, Columbus, OH 43210 USA EM sayer.12@sociology.osu.edu CR Cotter David A., 2011 England P, 2010, GENDER SOC, V24, P149, DOI 10.1177/0891243210361475 England P, 2009, POPUL DEV REV, V35, P797 England Paula, 2009, Families as They Really Are, P416 Dew Jeffrey, 2009 Clarkwest A, 2007, J MARRIAGE FAM, V69, P639, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2007.00397.x Muthen LK, 2007, MPLUS USERS GUIDE Stone P, 2007, OPTING OUT: WHY WOMEN REALLY QUIT CAREERS AND HEAD HOME, P1 Amato P. R., 2007, ALONE TOGETHER MARRI Shafer Emily F., 2007, Unmarried Couples with Children, P55 Hewitt B, 2006, J MARRIAGE FAM, V68, P1165, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2006.00321.x Cooke LP, 2006, AM J SOCIOL, V112, P442, DOI 10.1086/506417 Kalmijn M, 2006, EUR SOCIOL REV, V22, P201, DOI 10.1093/esr/jci052 Schoen R, 2006, J FAM ISSUES, V27, P506, DOI 10.1177/0192513X05283983 Bianchi S. M., 2006, CHANGING RHYTHMS AM Coontz S., 2005, MARRIAGE HIST OBEDIE England Paula, 2005 Cherlin AJ, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P848, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00058.x Rogers SJ, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P59, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2004.00005.x Hermsen Joan M., 2004, The American People Census 2000, P107 Bittman M, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P186, DOI 10.1086/378341 Frisco ML, 2003, J FAM ISSUES, V24, P51, DOI 10.1177/0192513X02238520 Schoen R, 2002, SOC FORCES, V81, P643, DOI 10.1353/sof.2003.0019 SWEET JA, 2002, NATL SURVEY FAMILIES Godecker Amy L., 2002 Allison PD, 2001, MISSING DATA NOCK SL, 2001, J FAMILY ISSUES, V22, P756 Rogers SJ, 2000, SOC FORCES, V79, P731, DOI 10.2307/2675515 Gottman JM, 2000, J MARRIAGE FAM, V62, P927, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2000.00927.x Bradbury TN, 2000, J MARRIAGE FAM, V62, P964, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2000.00964.x Sayer LC, 2000, J FAM ISSUES, V21, P906, DOI 10.1177/019251300021007005 Sanchez L, 2000, J MARRIAGE FAM, V62, P708, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2000.00708.x Yamaguchi K, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P1702, DOI 10.1086/210470 Bumpass L, 2000, POP STUD-J DEMOG, V54, P29, DOI 10.1080/713779060 Brinig M., 2000, AM L EC REV, V2, P126, DOI 10.1093/aler/2.1.126 Cherlin A. J., 2000, TIES BIND PERSPECTIV, P126 Hobcraft John, 2000, WOMENS EMPOWERMENT D, P159 Cohen PN, 1999, MON LABOR REV, V122, P22 Rogers SJ, 1999, J MARRIAGE FAM, V61, P123, DOI 10.2307/353888 Heaton TB, 1999, J FAM ISSUES, V20, P25, DOI 10.1177/019251399020001002 Conger RD, 1999, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V76, P54, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.76.1.54 Wilkie JR, 1998, J MARRIAGE FAM, V60, P577, DOI 10.2307/353530 Ono H, 1998, J MARRIAGE FAM, V60, P674, DOI 10.2307/353537 Heckert DA, 1998, J MARRIAGE FAM, V60, P690, DOI 10.2307/353538 Blau FD, 1998, J ECON LIT, V36, P112 Risman B., 1998, GENDER VERTIGO AM FA Nock Steven L., 1998, MARRIAGE MENS LIVES HIEDEMANN B, 1998, J MARRIAGE FAM, V60, P219, DOI 10.2307/353453 Ruggles S, 1997, DEMOGRAPHY, V34, P455, DOI 10.2307/3038300 Oppenheimer VK, 1997, DEMOGRAPHY, V34, P467, DOI 10.2307/3038301 Amato PR, 1997, J MARRIAGE FAM, V59, P612, DOI 10.2307/353949 Smock PJ, 1997, DEMOGRAPHY, V34, P331, DOI 10.2307/3038287 Lundberg SJ, 1997, J HUM RESOUR, V32, P463, DOI 10.2307/146179 Oppenheimer VK, 1997, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V23, P431, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.431 Weiss Y, 1997, J LABOR ECON, V15, pS293, DOI 10.1086/209864 Lundberg S, 1996, J ECON PERSPECT, V10, P139 HOFFMAN SD, 1995, J HUM RESOUR, V30, P19, DOI 10.2307/146189 TZENG JM, 1995, SOC SCI RES, V24, P329, DOI 10.1006/ssre.1995.1013 SOUTH SJ, 1995, AM SOCIOL REV, V60, P21, DOI 10.2307/2096343 GREENSTEIN TN, 1995, J MARRIAGE FAM, V57, P31, DOI 10.2307/353814 Molm L., 1995, SOCIOL PERSPECT, P209 NOCK SL, 1995, J FAM ISSUES, V16, P53, DOI 10.1177/019251395016001004 WINSHIP C, 1994, SOCIOL METHOD RES, V23, P230, DOI 10.1177/0049124194023002004 BRINES J, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V100, P652, DOI 10.1086/230577 LUNDBERG S, 1994, AM ECON REV, V84, P132 Gottman J. M., 1994, WHAT PREDICTS DIVORC Clogg C. C., 1994, STAT MODELS ORDINAL HOPPER J, 1993, J MARRIAGE FAM, V55, P801, DOI 10.2307/352763 Gottman JM, 1993, J FAMILY PSYCHOL, V7, P57, DOI 10.1037//0893-3200.7.1.57 Sabatelli R. M., 1993, SOURCEBOOK FAMILY TH, P385, DOI 10.1007/978-0-387-85764-0_16 WADSBY M, 1992, FAM PRACT, V9, P451, DOI 10.1093/fampra/9.4.451 Giddens Anthony, 1992, TRANSFORMATION INTIM Kitson G. C., 1992, PORTRAIT DIVORCE ADJ HEATON TB, 1991, J MARRIAGE FAM, V53, P747, DOI 10.2307/352748 WHITE LK, 1991, J FAM ISSUES, V12, P5, DOI 10.1177/019251391012001002 BUMPASS LL, 1991, J FAM ISSUES, V12, P22, DOI 10.1177/019251391012001003 WAITE LJ, 1991, AM J SOCIOL, V96, P930, DOI 10.1086/229613 Becker Gary S., 1991, A Treatise on the Family MCELROY MB, 1990, J HUM RESOUR, V25, P559, DOI 10.2307/145667 GREENSTEIN TN, 1990, J MARRIAGE FAM, V52, P657, DOI 10.2307/352932 England P., 1990, MARKETPLACE RETHINKI, P163 THOMPSON L, 1989, J MARRIAGE FAM, V51, P845, DOI 10.2307/353201 MARTIN TC, 1989, DEMOGRAPHY, V26, P37, DOI 10.2307/2061492 SPITZE G, 1988, J MARRIAGE FAM, V50, P595, DOI 10.2307/352633 Bumpass Larry L., 1988, National Survey of Families and Households working paper no. 1 JOHNSON WR, 1986, AM ECON REV, V76, P455 England P., 1986, HOUSEHOLDS EMPLOYMEN VAUGHAN D, 1986, UNCOUPLING TURNING P SPITZE G, 1985, J FAM ISSUES, V6, P307, DOI 10.1177/019251385006003004 CLOGG CC, 1984, J AM STAT ASSOC, V79, P762, DOI 10.2307/2288706 Allison P. D., 1984, EVENT HIST ANAL REGR Spanier GrahamB, 1984, PARTING AFTERMATH SE Allison P. A., 1982, SOCIOL METHODOL, P61 MOORE KA, 1981, SOC FORCES, V60, P20, DOI 10.2307/2577930 MANSER M, 1980, INT ECON REV, V21, P31, DOI 10.2307/2526238 WALLERSTEIN JS, 1980, AM J PSYCHIAT, V137, P1534 Cherlin Andrew J., 1979, Divorce and Separation: Context, Causes, and Consequences, P151 MOTT FL, 1979, J MARRIAGE FAM, V41, P355, DOI 10.2307/351702 ROSS HL, 1975, TIME TRANSITION GROW, P35 GOODMAN LA, 1974, AM J SOCIOL, V79, P1179, DOI 10.1086/225676 Commalle Jacques, 1974, Economie et Statistique, V53, P3 Hauser RM, 1971, SOCIOL METHODOL, P81 Hirschman Albert, 1970, EXIT VOICE LOYALTY HEER DM, 1963, MARRIAGE FAM LIVING, V25, P133, DOI 10.2307/349170 Parsons T, 1949, FAMILY ITS FUNCTION, P173 NR 105 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD MAY PY 2011 VL 116 IS 6 BP 1982 EP 2018 DI 10.1086/658173 PG 37 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 790QH UT WOS:000292603800006 ER PT J AU Del Rosso, J AF Del Rosso, Jared TI The Textual Mediation of Denial: Congress, Abu Ghraib, and the Construction of an Isolated Incident SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE human rights; torture; denial; texts; Abu Ghraib ID SOCIAL-PROBLEMS; TORTURE; SOCIOLOGY; ACCOUNTS; BEHAVIOR; IMAGES; STATE; NORMS; MODEL AB The rhetorical techniques by which governments deny, justify, and qualify alleged instances of torture have been well documented. Sociologists, however, have neglected the social contexts in which officials confront allegations of torture, as well as officials' use of evidence to strengthen their own or weaken competing claims about torture. Relying on findings from a qualitative content analysis of seven Senate Armed Services Committee hearings held in 2004 on "detainee abuse" at Abu Ghraib prison, this article examines the processes by which hearing participants portrayed the violence there as an isolated incident. Building on James A. Holstein and Jaber F. Gubrium's (2003) "constructionist analytics," I examine the textual mediation of claims-making in the hearings, focusing on the interplay between textual realities of detainee abuse and the interpretive uses to which hearing participants put these realities. I show that developments in the textual environment of the hearings, particularly the development of a textually mediated vantage on events that "really occurred" throughout Afghanistan and Iraq, provided hearing participants with rich interpretive materials to downplay and rationalize instances of abuse that occurred in places other than Abu Ghraib prison. These findings suggest that official denial is sustained by diverse claims-making activities, including the production of a textual reality of human rights violations. The findings also extend the purview of social problems theory to account for the role of texts in the construction of social problems. C1 Boston Coll, Dept Sociol, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467 USA. RP Del Rosso, J (reprint author), Boston Coll, Dept Sociol, McGuinn Hall,140 Commonwealth Ave, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467 USA EM delrosso@bc.edu CR CROSSLEY N., 2011, RELATIONAL SOCIOLOGY *POLLINGREPORT, 2011, GW BUSH JOB RAT Obama Barack, 2010, COMMUNICATION 0831 BERGER RAOUL, 1997, NY TIMES 1104, P457 Latour B., 2010, MAKING LAW ETHNOGRAP MYERS SL, 2010, NY TIMES 0917 Butler Judith, 2009, FRAMES WAR IS LIFE G Weinberg D, 2009, AM SOCIOL, V40, P61 DANNER M, 2009, NEW YORK REV BO 0430 *COMM PRES DEB, 2009, OCT 8 2004 DEB TRANS Chang GC, 2008, DISCOURSE SOC, V19, P453, DOI 10.1177/0957926508089939 Jerolmack C, 2008, SOC PROBL, V55, P72, DOI 10.1525/sp.2008.55.1.72 Shor E, 2008, SOC PROBL, V55, P117, DOI 10.1525/sp.2008.55.1.117 GOUREVITCH P, 2008, STANDARD OPERATING P GORDON A, 2008, GHOSTLY MATTERS ANDENPAPADOPOUL.K, 2008, JOURNALISM, V9, P5, DOI 10.1177/1464884907084337 BEST J, 2008, SOCIAL PROBLEMS Payne Leigh A., 2008, UNSETTLING ACCOUNTS *PHYS HUM RIGHTS, 2008, BROK LAWS BROK LIV IBARRA PR, 2008, HDB CONSTRUCTIONIST, P355 PFOHL SJ, 2008, HDB CONSTRUCTIONIST, P645 MARETEA R, 2008, SOC PROBL, V55, P139 Lazreg Marnia, 2008, TORTURE TWILIGHT EMP Cardenas S, 2007, PA STUD HUM RIGHTS, P1 Rejali D, 2007, TORTURE AND DEMOCRACY, P1 BROWN M, 2007, CRIMES TRIALS CENTUR, V2, P305 ATHEY S, 2007, CULTURE TRAUMA CONFL, P135 ZVERZHANOVSKI I, 2007, SE EUROPEAN BLACK SE, V7, P417, DOI 10.1080/14683850701566377 Bennett WL, 2006, J COMMUN, V56, P467, DOI 10.1111/j.1460-2466.2006.00296.x Human Rights Watch, 2006, NO BLOOD NO FOUL SOL Luban D, 2005, VA LAW REV, V91, P1425 Waldron J, 2005, COLUMBIA LAW REV, V105, P1681 Apel D, 2005, ART J, V64, P88 Hooks G, 2005, SOC FORCES, V83, P1627, DOI 10.1353/sof.2005.0068 Loveman M, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P1651, DOI 10.1086/428688 Latour B., 2005, REASSEMBLING SOCIAL TAYLOR J, 2005, JOURNALISM STUD, V6, P39, DOI 10.1080/1461670052000328195 SCHMITT E, 2005, NY TIMES 1216 Graneheim UH, 2004, NURS EDUC TODAY, V24, P105, DOI 10.1016/j.nedt.2003.10.001 Hersh SM, 2004, NEW YORKER 0510 Danner M., 2004, TORTURE TRUTH AM ABU Taguba A. M, 2004, ARTICLE 15 6 INVESTI SCHLESINGER JR, 2004, FINAL REPORT INDEPEN *ICRC, 2004, REP INT COMM RED CRO SONTAG S, 2004, NY TIMES MAGAZI 0523 RICCHIARDI S, 2004, AM JOURNALISM REV, V26, P22 *COAL PROV AUTH, 2004, COAL PROV AUTH BRIEF *US DEP ARM, 2004, DET OP INSP PETERS E, 2004, GEORGE MASON U 0531 JONES AR, 2004, INVESTIGATION INTELL JOHNSON A, 2004, MSNBC COM 0507 Leinwand Donna, 2004, CBS NEWS 0428 ZAROCOSTAS J, 2004, WASHINGTON TIME 0511 Sontag Susan, 2003, REGARDING PAIN OTHER HOLSTEIN JA, 2003, CHALLENGES CHOICES C, P187 BOGARD C, 2003, CHALLENGES CHOICES C, P209 2003, CNN 0501 SANGER DE, 2003, NY TIMES 0320 BURNS JF, 2003, NY TIMES 0410 Cohen S, 2001, STATES DENIAL KNOWIN Smith D. E., 2001, CULTURE ORG, V7, P159, DOI 10.1080/10245280108523557 Montello DR, 2001, INT ENCY SOCIAL BEHA, P13501 Conroy J, 2000, UNSPEAKABLE ACTS ORD HOLSTEIN JA, 2000, SELF WE LIVE BY Risse T, 1999, POLIT SOC, V27, P529, DOI 10.1177/0032329299027004004 Scott J.C., 1999, SEEING STATE CERTAIN Taylor John, 1998, BODY HORROR PHOTOJOU Emirbayer M, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P281, DOI 10.1086/231209 Nichols LT, 1997, SOC PROBL, V44, P324, DOI 10.1525/sp.1997.44.3.03x0118n Naples NA, 1997, SIGNS, V22, P907, DOI 10.1086/495214 Orbuch TL, 1997, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V23, P455, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.455 ASAD T, 1997, SOCIAL SUFFERING, P285 Potter J, 1996, REPRESENTING REALITY Lynch M, 1996, SPECTACLE HIST SPEEC FORREST D, 1996, GLIMPSE HELL, P167 Becker H, 1995, VISUAL SOCIOLOGY, V10, P5, DOI 10.1080/14725869508583745 Benoit W, 1995, ACCOUNTS EXCUSES APO Best J., 1995, IMAGES ISSUES TYPIFY JOHNSON JM, 1995, IMAGES ISSUES TYPIFY, P17 ORCUTT JD, 1993, SOC PROBL, V40, P190, DOI 10.1525/sp.1993.40.2.03x0325m Baumgartner Frank R., 1993, AGENDAS INSTABILITY Best Joel, 1993, RECONSIDERING SOCIAL, P129 HOLSTEIN JA, 1993, RECONSIDERING SOCIAL, P151 PFOHL SJ, 1993, RECONSIDERING SOCIAL, P403 Ibarra Peter R., 1993, RECONSIDERING SOCIAL, P25 PFOHL S, 1992, DEATH PARASITE CAFE HARAWAY D, 1992, SIMIANS CYBORGS WOME BOYNTON GR, 1991, DISCOURSE SOC, V2, P131, DOI 10.1177/0957926591002002001 SEIDMAN S, 1991, SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY, V9, P131, DOI 10.2307/202074 Smith D. E., 1990, CONCEPTUAL PRACTICES Best J, 1990, THREATENED CHILDREN Smith D. E., 1990, TEXTS FACTS FEMININI GUSFIELD JR, 1989, SOC PROBL, V36, P431, DOI 10.1525/sp.1989.36.5.03x0003c CAMPBELL R, 1989, CRIT STUD MASS COMM, V6, P21 HILGARTNER S, 1988, AM J SOCIOL, V94, P53, DOI 10.1086/228951 Alexander Jeffrey C., 1988, DURKHEIMIAN SOCIOLOG, P187 Altheide DL, 1987, QUALITATIVE SOCIOLOG, V10, P65, DOI DOI 10.1007/BF00988269 Latour B, 1987, SCI ACTION FOLLOW SC Spector M, 1987, CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL Pollner M., 1987, MUNDANE REASON REALI Giddens Anthony, 1987, NATION STATE VIOLENC Callon M., 1986, POWER ACTION BELIEF, P196 Beccaria Cesare, 1986, CRIMES PUNISHMENTS SCHNEIDER JW, 1985, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V11, P209, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.11.1.209 Scarry E., 1985, BODY PAIN MAKING UNM PETERS Edward, 1985, TORTURE PFOHL S, 1985, SOC PROBL, V32, P228, DOI 10.1525/sp.1985.32.3.03a00030 United Nations General Assembly, 1984, CONV TORT OTH CRUEL Barthes Roland, 1981, CAMERA LUCIDA REFLEC Burton F., 1979, OFFICIAL DISCOURSE D Sontag Susan, 1977, PHOTOGRAPHY Foucault M, 1977, DISCIPLINE PUNISH PFOHL SJ, 1977, SOC PROBL, V24, P310, DOI 10.1525/sp.1977.24.3.03a00020 Langbein J.H., 1977, TORTURE LAW PROOF *AMN INT, 1975, REP TORT COLLINS R, 1974, THEOR SOC, V1, P415, DOI 10.1007/BF00160802 Ricoeur P, 1973, NEW LITERARY HIST, V5, P91, DOI 10.2307/468410 SPECTOR M, 1973, SOC PROBL, V21, P145, DOI 10.1525/sp.1973.21.2.03a00010 KITSUSE JI, 1973, SOC PROBL, V20, P407, DOI 10.1525/sp.1973.20.4.03a00020 BLUMER H, 1971, SOC PROBL, V18, P298, DOI 10.1525/sp.1971.18.3.03a00020 SCOTT MB, 1968, AM SOCIOL REV, V33, P46, DOI 10.2307/2092239 Goffman E, 1959, PRESENTATION SELF EV SYKES GM, 1957, AM SOCIOL REV, V22, P664, DOI 10.2307/2089195 LECKY WEH, 1955, HIST RISE INFLUENCE United Nations General Assembly, 1948, UN DECL HUM RIGHTS LEA HC, 1866, SUPERSTITION FORCE E SCHULZ W, PHENOMENON TORTURE, P36 NR 127 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD MAY PY 2011 VL 58 IS 2 BP 165 EP 188 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.2.165 PG 24 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 757YL UT WOS:000290124700001 ER PT J AU Feliciano, C Lee, R Robnett, B AF Feliciano, Cynthia Lee, Rennie Robnett, Belinda TI Racial Boundaries among Latinos: Evidence from Internet Daters' Racial Preferences SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE Latinos; race; racial hierarchy; dating; assimilation ID UNITED-STATES; SEGMENTED ASSIMILATION; MEXICAN-AMERICANS; ETHNICITY; ATTITUDES; MARRIAGE; IMMIGRANTS; MINORITY; COLOR; RACE AB How the growing Latino population fits into the U.S. racial structure is a subject of considerable debate. Are Latinos developing into a separate racial group, becoming part of the dominant group, or creating a panminority group with nonwhites? Extending beyond existing research that uses intermarriage or survey data to assess racial boundaries, this study examines Latinos' stated racial preferences for dates among a sample of over 4,000 Internet daters in Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, and Atlanta. We find that few Latinos prefer to only date other Latinos. Latinos are much more likely to prefer to date whites than blacks, and are much more likely than blacks to prefer whites, suggesting that the Latino-white boundary is less rigid than Latino-black or black-white boundaries. However, Latinos are also much more likely to prefer blacks than whites are. Further analyses highlight differences in racial preferences among Latinos by metropolitan.area, educational level, language, and religion. Greater proximity to blacks in New York and Atlanta promotes greater acceptance. In these locales, we see some indications of a panminority group of blacks and a small set of Latinos developing. While the majority of Latinos accept racial hierarchies that privilege whiles, providing evidence that many are assimilating into the dominant group, assimilation patterns vary for different segments of the diverse Latino population. C1 [Feliciano, Cynthia] Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Sociol, Irvine, CA 92697 USA. [Lee, Rennie] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA USA. RP Feliciano, C (reprint author), Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Sociol, 3151 Social Sci Plaza, Irvine, CA 92697 USA, USA EM felician@uci.edu CR *US CENS BUR, 2011, HISP POP US Hitsch GJ, 2010, QME-QUANT MARK ECON, V8, P393, DOI 10.1007/s11129-010-9088-6 Sautter JM, 2010, SOC SCI QUART, V91, P554 Feliciano C, 2009, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V52, P135, DOI 10.1525/sop.2009.52.2.135 Feliciano C, 2009, SOC SCI RES, V38, P41, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2008.09.004 Jung M, 2009, DUBOIS REV, V6, P375 Rumbaut R. G., 2009, US RACIALIZES LATINO, P15 TOVAR J, 2009, LATINO STUDIES, V7, P197 GOMEZ LE, 2009, US RACIALIZES LATINO, P87 Jimenez TR, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P1527, DOI 10.1086/587151 Obrien Eileen, 2008, RACIAL MIDDLE LATINO Telles E., 2008, GENERATIONS EXCLUSIO Chavez Leo, 2008, LATINO THREAT CONSTR Golash-Boza T, 2008, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V31, P899, DOI 10.1080/01419870701568858 GALLAGHER CA, 2008, WHITE LOGIC WHITE ME, P163 Lee J, 2007, SOC FORCES, V86, P561 Wilson SB, 2007, J BLACK STUD, V37, P964, DOI 10.1177/0021934705282375 Fu VK, 2007, J COMP FAM STUD, V38, P215 Qian ZC, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P68 Levitt Peggy, 2007, GOD NEEDS NO PASSPOR CITRO CF, 2007, USING AM COMMUNITY S Aranda Elizabeth M., 2007, EMOTIONAL BRIDGES PU Rumbaut RG, 2006, POPUL DEV REV, V32, P447, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4457.2006.00132.x Golash-Boza T, 2006, SOC FORCES, V85, P27, DOI 10.1353/sof.2006.0124 McClain PD, 2006, J POLIT, V68, P571 Vaquera E, 2006, SOCIOL QUART, V47, P375, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.2006.00050.x Guglielmo TA, 2006, J AM HIST, V92, P1212 Madden M, 2006, ONLINE DATING LEE SS, 2006, AM J LATINO LATIN AM, V2, P84 Joyner K, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P563 Harris DR, 2005, SOC SCI RES, V34, P236, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2004.01.002 Carter P, 2005, KEEPIN IT REAL SCH S Darity W., 2005, TRANSFORMING ANTHR, V13, P103 Hunsberger B, 2005, J SOC ISSUES, V61, P807, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-4560.2005.00433.x *US CENS BUR, 2005, AM COMM SURV Johnson KR, 2005, NEITHER ENEMIES NOR FRIENDS: LATINOS, BLACKS, AFRO-LATINOS, P247 Lewis AE, 2004, SOCIOL THEOR, V22, P623, DOI 10.1111/j.0735-2751.2004.00237.x Bonilla-silva E, 2004, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V27, P931, DOI 10.1080/0141987042000268530 Blackwell DL, 2004, SOCIOL QUART, V45, P719, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.2004.tb02311.x Qian ZC, 2004, SOC SCI RES, V33, P225, DOI 10.1016/S0049-089X(03)00055-3 Brubaker R, 2004, THEOR SOC, V33, P31, DOI 10.1023/B:RYSO.0000021405.18890.63 Huntington Samuel P, 2004, FOREIGN POLICY MAR, P30, DOI 10.2307/4147547 GUZMAN IM, 2004, COMMUNICATION REV, V7, P205, DOI 10.1080/10714420490448723 ITZIGSOHN J, 2004, NOT JUST BLACK WHITE, P197 Oliver JE, 2003, AM J POLIT SCI, V47, P567, DOI 10.2307/3186119 Alba R.D., 2003, REMAKING AM MAINSTRE Bonilla-Silva E., 2003, RACISM RACISTS COLOR Lewis A, 2003, RACE SCHOOLYARD NEGO MURGUIA E, 2003, WHITE OUT CONTINUING, P63 Yancey G., 2003, WHO IS WHITE LATINOS *US CENS BUR, 2003, CURR POP SURV INT CO Yancey G, 2002, J COMP FAM STUD, V33, P179 FORMAN T, 2002, RACE SOC, V5, P65, DOI 10.1016/j.racsoc.2003.12.005 Schoen R, 2001, POPUL DEV REV, V27, P553, DOI 10.1111/j.1728-4457.2001.00553.x Rosenfeld MJ, 2001, DEMOGRAPHY, V38, P161, DOI 10.2307/3088298 Cornwell B, 2001, COMPUT HUM BEHAV, V17, P197, DOI 10.1016/S0747-5632(00)00040-6 Portes A., 2001, LEGACIES STORY IMMIG BONILLA-SILVA EDUARDO, 2001, RACE SOC, V4, P117, DOI 10.1016/S1090-9524(03)00004-4 FELICIANO C, 2001, RACE SOC, V4, P27, DOI 10.1016/S1090-9524(02)00033-5 Charles CZ, 2000, SOC PROBL, V47, P379, DOI 10.1525/sp.2000.47.3.03x0297k Ochoa GL, 2000, SOC SCI QUART, V81, P84 Feagin JR, 2000, RACIST AM ROOTS CURR Rodriguez C. E., 2000, CHANGING RACE LATINO Bonilla-Silva E, 2000, DISCOURSE SOC, V11, P50, DOI 10.1177/0957926500011001003 Neckerman KM, 1999, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V22, P945 Kim CJ, 1999, POLIT SOC, V27, P105, DOI 10.1177/0032329299027001005 Gans H.J., 1999, CULTURAL TERRITORIES, P371 Taylor MC, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P512, DOI 10.2307/2657265 Tuan Mia, 1998, FOREVER FOREIGNERS H Warren JW, 1997, J BLACK STUD, V28, P200 Oboler Suzanne, 1995, ETHNIC LABELS LATINO JACKSON BO, 1994, POLIT RES QUART, V47, P277, DOI 10.2307/449010 ALMAGUER T, 1994, RACIAL FAULT LINES O PORTES A, 1993, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V530, P74, DOI 10.1177/0002716293530001006 ESCOBAR EJ, 1993, J AM HIST, V79, P1483, DOI 10.2307/2080213 SOUTH SJ, 1992, J MARRIAGE FAM, V54, P440, DOI 10.2307/353075 KALMIJN M, 1991, AM SOCIOL REV, V56, P786, DOI 10.2307/2096256 LOPEZ D, 1990, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V13, P198 DYER J, 1989, SOC SCI QUART, V70, P607 Tajfel H., 1986, PSYCHOL INTERGROUP R, P7 JACKMAN MR, 1984, AM SOCIOL REV, V49, P751, DOI 10.2307/2095528 PADILLA FM, 1984, SOC SCI QUART, V65, P651 ALBA RD, 1981, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V454, P86, DOI 10.1177/000271628145400108 Allport G.W., 1979, NATURE PREJUDICE YANCEY WL, 1976, AM SOCIOL REV, V41, P391, DOI 10.2307/2094249 Blauner Bob, 1972, RACIAL OPPRESSION AM BARTH F, 1969, ETHNIC GROUPS GOUNDA Gordon M.M., 1964, ASSIMILATION AM LIFE Heider F, 1958, PSYCHOL INTERPERSONA Bogardus Emory S, 1928, IMMIGRATION RACE ATT NR 90 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD MAY PY 2011 VL 58 IS 2 BP 189 EP 212 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.2.189 PG 24 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 757YL UT WOS:000290124700002 ER PT J AU McCarthy, B Grodsky, E AF McCarthy, Bill Grodsky, Eric TI Sex and School: Adolescent Sexual Intercourse and Education SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE adolescent sexual intercourse; education; romantic relationships; sex norms; the life course ID ROMANTIC RELATIONSHIPS; 1ST SEX; CONTEXT; DELINQUENCY; VIRGINITY; ATTITUDES; BEHAVIOR; ABSTINENCE; SELECTION; HEALTH AB A number of studies document a negative relationship between adolescent sexual intercourse and high school educational experiences and outcomes; yet, this research risks conflating the consequences associated with sex in romantic relationships with those that result when sex occurs in other relationship contexts. We predict that, compared to abstinence, intercourse in romantic relationships will have limited consequences for education, whereas the negative effects associated with sex in other relationships will be pronounced. We evaluate our hypothesis with two waves of data on nine measures of educational experiences and outcomes from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. Our results are generally consistent with our predictions: the context in which sexual activity occurs substantially moderates the relationship between sexual intercourse and several education measures. These findings contradict the claims some abstinence-only curricula make regarding the link between adolescent sex and a plethora of negative outcomes. We speculate that such programs reinforce the notion that sex, and in particular sex that occurs in nonromantic relationships, is counternormative. As a result, they may needlessly increase the risk that some sexually active adolescents will have negative educational experiences and outcomes. C1 [McCarthy, Bill] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Sociol, Davis, CA 95616 USA. [Grodsky, Eric] Univ Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA. RP McCarthy, B (reprint author), Univ Calif Davis, Dept Sociol, Davis, CA 95616 USA, USA EM bdmccarthy@ucdavis.edu CR Schalet A, 2010, GENDER SOC, V24, P304, DOI 10.1177/0891243210368400 LORD AM, 2010, CONDOM NATION US GOV CHAPMAN C, 2010, TRENDS HIGH SCH DROP KIM C, 2010, EVIDENCE EFFECTIVENE Chappell AT, 2010, SOCIOL SPECTRUM, V30, P196, DOI 10.1080/02732170903496117 *CDCP, 2010, STUD BEH SCH POL PRA *CDCP, 2010, SURV SUMM, V59, pSS5 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2010, TRENDS PREV SEX BEH Forhan SE, 2009, PEDIATRICS, V124, P1505, DOI 10.1542/peds.2009-0674 Kreager DA, 2009, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V72, P143 VENTURA SJ, 2009, NATL VITAL STAT REPO, V58 MECKLER L, 2009, WALL STREET J 0507 McCarthy B, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P944 Monahan KC, 2008, J YOUTH ADOLESCENCE, V37, P917, DOI 10.1007/s10964-007-9256-5 Goyette KA, 2008, SOC SCI RES, V37, P461, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2008.02.002 Harden KP, 2008, J YOUTH ADOLESCENCE, V37, P373, DOI 10.1007/s10964-007-9228-9 Trenholm C, 2008, J POLICY ANAL MANAG, V27, P255, DOI 10.1002/pam.20324 Fields J., 2008, RISKY LESSONS SEX ED Cavanagh SE, 2007, SOCIOL INQ, V77, P572, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2007.00207.x Sabia JJ, 2007, ECON INQ, V45, P647, DOI 10.1111/j.1465-7295.2007.00056.x Sabia JJ, 2007, SOUTH ECON J, V74, P239 Harding DJ, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P341 Meier AM, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V112, P1811, DOI 10.1086/512708 Mollborn S, 2007, J MARRIAGE FAM, V69, P92, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2006.00347.x Muller Chandra, 2007, WAVE 3 ED DATA DESIG ASHBEE E, 2007, BUSH ADM SEX MORAL A Manning WD, 2006, J ADOLESCENT RES, V21, P459, DOI 10.1177/0743558406291692 Sabia JJ, 2006, J POLICY ANAL MANAG, V25, P783, DOI 10.1002/pam.20208 Reynolds JR, 2006, SOC PROBL, V53, P186, DOI 10.1525/sp.2006.53.2.186 Santelli J, 2006, J ADOLESCENT HEALTH, V38, P72, DOI 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2005.10.006 Fine M., 2006, HARVARD EDUC REV, V76, P297 Furman W, 2006, PENN STATE UNIV FAM, P171 MOORE S, 2006, SEXUALITY ADOLESCENC LUKER K, 2006, SEX GOES SCH WARRING Brown BB, 2006, PENN STATE UNIV FAM, P113 CRISSEY SR, 2006, THESIS U TEXAS AUSTI Browning CR, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P758 Smith LH, 2005, J YOUTH ADOLESCENCE, V34, P361, DOI 10.1007/s10964-005-5762-5 South SJ, 2005, J MARRIAGE FAM, V67, P499, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2005.00131.x Kuncel NR, 2005, REV EDUC RES, V75, P63, DOI 10.3102/00346543075001063 Cameron C., 2005, MICROECONOMETRICS ME Rector RE, 2005, Heritage foundation report CARLSON DK, 2005, GALLUP POLL REP 0802 Shoveller JA, 2004, SOC SCI MED, V59, P473, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2003.11.017 SCHALET A, 2004, MEDSCAPE GEN MED, V6, P1 Haynie DL, 2003, SOC FORCES, V82, P355, DOI 10.1353/sof.2003.0093 Crawford M, 2003, J SEX RES, V40, P13 Grello C. M., 2003, ADOLESC FAM HLTH, V3, P103 Treas J, 2002, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V45, P267, DOI 10.1525/sop.2002.45.3.267 Tolman D., 2002, DILEMMAS DESIRE TEEN KAUFMAN P, 2002, DROPOUT RATES US 200 IRWIN JM, 2002, TALK SEX BATTLES SEX Schvaneveldt PL, 2001, ADOLESCENCE, V36, P767 Bearman PS, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V106, P859, DOI 10.1086/320295 *UNICEF, 2001, LEAG TABL TEEN BIRTH Halpern CT, 2000, J ADOLESCENT HEALTH, V26, P213, DOI 10.1016/S1054-139X(99)00061-0 SCHALET A, 2000, BODY SOC, V6, P75, DOI DOI 10.1177/1357034X00006001006 BINGHAM C, 2000, ADOLESCENT DEV, P106 Chantalla K., 1999, STRATEGIES PERFORM D JONES AS, 1999, J FAMILY EC ISSUES, V20, P387, DOI 10.1023/A:1022932305898 Bearman P. S., 1997, NATL LONGITUDINAL ST CARVER K, 1997, ANN M POP ASS WASH D Tubman JG, 1996, CHILD DEV, V67, P327, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8624.1996.tb01737.x RODGERS JL, 1996, TRANSITIONS ADOLESCE, P85 Thompson S., 1995, GOING ALL WAY TEENAG Eder Donna, 1995, SCH TALK GENDER ADOL HOFFMAN SD, 1993, DEMOGRAPHY, V30, P1, DOI 10.2307/2061859 CASPI A, 1993, DEV PSYCHOL, V29, P19, DOI 10.1037/0012-1649.29.1.19 RUBIN GS, 1993, AM FEMINIST THOUGHT, P3 OHANNESSIAN, 1993, J ADOLESCENT RES, V8, P167 MOORE S, 1992, J ADOLESCENCE, V15, P415, DOI 10.1016/0140-1971(92)90072-D BRIEN MJ, 1992, KIDS HAVING KIDS EC, P95 HOTZ VJ, 1992, KIDS HAYING KIDS EC, P55 Gottfredson M. R., 1990, GEN THEORY CRIME MILLER BC, 1988, J YOUTH ADOLESCENCE, V17, P521, DOI 10.1007/BF01537829 BILLY JOG, 1988, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V51, P190, DOI 10.2307/2786919 JESSOR R, 1977, PROBLEMATIC BEHAV PS HECKMAN JJ, 1976, ANN ECON SOC MEAS, V5, P475 JESSOR SL, 1975, DEV PSYCHOL, V11, P473, DOI 10.1037/h0076664 MILLER PY, 1974, SOC PROBL, V22, P58, DOI 10.1525/sp.1974.22.1.03a00050 Hirschi T, 1969, CAUSES DELINQUENCY NR 81 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD MAY PY 2011 VL 58 IS 2 BP 213 EP 234 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.2.213 PG 22 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 757YL UT WOS:000290124700003 ER PT J AU Leitz, L AF Leitz, Lisa TI Oppositional Identities: The Military Peace Movement's Challenge to Pro-Iraq War Frames SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE social movements; peace; Iraq War; identity; strategy ID COLLECTIVE ACTION; SOCIAL-MOVEMENTS; GULF-WAR; ORGANIZATIONS; DISCOURSE; RESONANCE; ACTIVISM; CRISIS; TROOPS; FOLK AB In the United States, rhetoric in support of the Iraq War often focuses on discourses of patriotism and supporting the troops. These discourses hold enormous sway over the American public because of the discursive legacies of the Vietnam War and the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. In response, members of the peace movement who are veterans, soldiers, and military families stress their military identities during activism. These individuals have organized as an important branch of the U.S. antiwar movement that challenges the pro-war framing of patriotism and troop support by strategically deploying "oppositional identities." The oppositional identity strategy involves highlighting the activism of individuals who many would assume would be part of the movement's opposition. In an effort to assert credibility and support their frames, activists assert this novel and seemingly contradictory identity. through organizational affiliation, rhetoric, clothing, mannerisms, and symbols. C1 Hendrix Coll, Dept Sociol Anthropol, Conway, AR 72032 USA. RP Leitz, L (reprint author), Hendrix Coll, Dept Sociol Anthropol, 1600 Washington Ave, Conway, AR 72032 USA EM leitz@hendrix.edu CR Lilley TG, 2010, SOCIOL INQ, V80, P313, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2010.00333.x MONTOPOLI B, 2010, CBS NEWS Kretschmer K, 2009, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V52, P433, DOI 10.1525/sop.2009.52.4.433 Gould Deborah, 2009, MOVING POLITICS EMOT Whittier N., 2009, POLITICS CHILD SEXUA BERNSTEIN M, 2009, SOCIOLOGY COMPASS, V3, P871 Coy PG, 2008, SOC PROBL, V55, P161, DOI 10.1525/sp.2008.55.2.161 Woehrle Lynn M, 2008, CONTESTING PATRIOTIS Myers D. J., 2008, IDENTITY WORK SOCIAL, P167 Klawiter M., 2008, BIOPOLITICS BREAST C Kaminski E., 2008, IDENTITY WORK SOCIAL, P47 DUGAN KB, 2008, IDENTITY WORK SOCIAL, P21 SCHROER T, 2008, IDENTITY WORK SOCIAL, P77 EINWOHNER RL, 2008, IDENTITY WORK SOCIAL, P121 NEUHOUSER K, 2008, IDENTITY WORK SOCIAL, P141 BERNSTEIN M, 2008, IDENTITY WORK SOCIAL, P277 *PEW RES CTR, 2008, PUBL ATT WAR IR 2003 Hipsher PL, 2007, SOCIOL INQ, V77, P241, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2007.00189.x PUENTE K, 2007, LONG BEACH PRES 1107, pA1 FIORE F, 2007, LOS ANGELES TIM 1207, pA1 ZAROYA G, 2007, US TODAY 1212, pA1 Haines HH, 2006, SOCIOL INQ, V76, P231, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2006.00153.x Falcous M., 2006, International Review for the Sociology of Sport, V41, P317, DOI 10.1177/1012690207079230 CORTESE DK, 2006, ARE WE THINKING STRA Heaney M., 2006, QUALITATIVE SOCIOLOG, V29, P485, DOI 10.1007/s11133-006-9040-y EINWOHNER, 2006, SOC PROBL, V53, P38 Ravi N, 2005, HARV INT J PRESS-POL, V10, P45, DOI 10.1177/1081180X05275765 Meyer DS, 2005, MOBILIZATION, V10, P327 Stolberg Sheryl Gay, 2010, WASH POST 0930, pA11 Flam H., 2005, EMOTIONS SOCIAL MOVE ARTZ L, 2005, BRING EM MEDIA POLIT STITKA L, 2005, J APPL SOC PSYCHOL, V35, P1995 SCHWEDLER J, 2005, SOCIAL MOVEMENT STUD, V4, P155, DOI 10.1080/14742830500191410 MANEY MG, 2005, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V48, P357 Denton RE, 2004, SOCIETY, V42, P12, DOI 10.1007/BF02687294 Kinnick KN, 2004, SOCIETY, V42, P32, DOI 10.1007/BF02687297 Altheide DL, 2004, SYMB INTERACT, V27, P289, DOI 10.1525/si.2004.27.3.289 Earl J., 2004, BLACKWELL COMPANION, P508, DOI 10.1002/9780470999103.ch22 Bamford J., 2004, PRETEXT WAR 9 11 IRA Gamson W. A., 2004, BLACKWELL COMPANION, P242, DOI 10.1002/9780470999103.ch11 GOODWIN J, 2004, BLACKWELL COMPANION, P413, DOI 10.1002/9780470999103.ch18 GOODMAN D, 2004, MOTHER JONES 1011 Rhomberg C, 2004, NO THERE THERE: RACE, CLASS, AND POLITICAL COMMUNITY IN OAKLAND, P1 RUTHERFORD P, 2004, WEAPONS MASS PERSUAS Ferree MM, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P304, DOI 10.1086/378343 Olick Jeffrey K, 2003, STATES MEMORY CONTIN Rupp L.J., 2003, DRAG QUEENS 801 CABA JEHL D, 2003, NY TIMES 0324, pB15 PARENTI M, 2003, PEACE REV, V15, P385, DOI 10.1080/1040265032000156708 JENSEN R, 2003, PEACE REV, V15, P389, DOI 10.1080/1040265032000156744 DREIER P, 2003, PEACE REV, V15, P397, DOI 10.1080/1040265032000156816 HAQUE MS, 2003, PEACE REV, V15, P451, DOI 10.1080/1040265032000156771 COY PG, 2003, PEACE REV, V15, P463, DOI 10.1080/1040265032000156825 Marx Ferree M., 2002, SHAPING ABORTION DIS Nussbaum M., 2002, LOVE COUNTRY BASCO S, 2002, DISSENT PURSUIT EQUA Polletta F, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P283, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.27.1.283 Goodwin J., 2001, PASSIONATE POLITICS Mansbridge J, 2001, OPPOSITIONAL CONSCIO Sudbury J, 2001, ETHNIC RACIAL STUD, V24, P29, DOI 10.1080/014198701750052488 WHITTIER N, 2001, PASSIONATE POLITICS, P233 CRAWFORD SES, 2001, CHRISTIAN CLERGY AM Benford RD, 2000, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V26, P611, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.26.1.611 TAYLOR V, 2000, SELF IDENTITY SOCIAL, P271 Steinberg MW, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P736, DOI 10.1086/210359 Coles RL, 1999, SOCIOL SPECTRUM, V19, P325, DOI 10.1080/027321799280181 Polletta F, 1999, THEOR SOC, V28, P1, DOI 10.1023/A:1006941408302 EINWOHNER, 1999, GENDER SOC, V13, P56 Kubal TJ, 1998, SOCIOL QUART, V39, P539, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1998.tb00517.x Burawoy M, 1998, SOCIOL THEOR, V16, P4, DOI 10.1111/0735-2751.00040 Lembcke Jerry, 1998, SPITTING IMAGE MYTH Bernstein M, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P531, DOI 10.1086/231250 Coy PG, 1996, SOCIOL SPECTRUM, V16, P287 Montini T, 1996, GENDER SOC, V10, P9, DOI 10.1177/089124396010001002 Meyer David, 1996, COMP PERSPECTIVES SO, P275 Taylor V., 1996, ROCK A BY BABY FEMIN BEAMISH TD, 1995, SOC PROBL, V42, P344, DOI 10.1525/sp.1995.42.3.03x0102x ELLINGSON S, 1995, AM J SOCIOL, V101, P100, DOI 10.1086/230700 TRNKA S, 1995, WESTERN FOLKLORE, V54, P232, DOI 10.2307/1500350 TAYLOR V, 1995, SOC PROBL, V42, P252, DOI 10.1525/sp.1995.42.2.03x0113i MEYER DS, 1995, POLIT COMMUN, V12, P173 MEYER DS, 1995, SOCIOL INQ, V65, P181, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.1995.tb00412.x Johnston Hank, 1995, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS CUL JASPER JM, 1993, SOCIOL FORUM, V8, P639, DOI 10.1007/BF01115215 NATHANSON S, 1993, PATRIOTISM MORALITY JOWETT GS, 1993, DESERT STORM MASS ME, P74 Gamson W. A, 1992, TALKING POLITICS Taylor V., 1992, FRONTIERS SOCIAL MOV, P104 Morris Aldon D., 1992, FRONTIERS SOCIAL MOV, P351 Morris A., 1992, FRONTIERS SOCIAL MOV, P174 BURKE C, 1989, J AM FOLKLORE, V102, P424, DOI 10.2307/541782 Greene Bob, 1989, HOMECOMING SOLDIERS FISHER J, 1989, MOTHERS DISAPPEARED Snow David, 1988, STRUCTURE ACTION COM, P197 SNOW DA, 1986, AM SOCIOL REV, V51, P464, DOI 10.2307/2095581 Fordham S., 1986, URBAN REV, V18, P176, DOI DOI 10.1007/BF01112192 Gramsci A., 1971, SELECTIONS PRISON NO *MON, SPUR QUOT WHITTIER N, STRATEGY AC IN PRESS NR 99 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD MAY PY 2011 VL 58 IS 2 BP 235 EP 256 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.2.235 PG 22 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 757YL UT WOS:000290124700004 ER PT J AU Lyons, CJ Pettit, B AF Lyons, Christopher J. Pettit, Becky TI Compounded Disadvantage: Race, Incarceration, and Wage Growth SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE incarceration; race; wages; stratification; labor market ID LABOR-MARKET; LIFE-COURSE; WHITE MEN; EMPLOYMENT; BLACK; CRIME; DISCRIMINATION; EARNINGS; IMPACT; UNEMPLOYMENT AB Spending time in prison has become an increasingly common life event for low-skill minority men in the United States. The Bureau of Justice Statistics now estimates that one in three black men can expect to spend time in prison during his lifetime. A growing body of work implicates the prison system in contemporary accounts of racial inequality across a host of social, health, economic, and political domains. However, comparatively little work has examined the impact of the massive increase in the prison system-and growing inequality in exposure to the prison system-on racial inequality over the life course. Using a unique data set drawn from state administrative records, this project examines how spending time in prison affects wage trajectories for a cohort of men over a 14-year period. Multilevel growth curve models show no evidence of racial divergence in wages in quarters leading up to incarceration. However, after release, wages grow at a 21 percent slower rate for black compared to white ex-inmates. Blacks also enjoy fewer wage returns to work history compared to their white counterparts. This research broadens our understanding of the sources of racial stratification over the life course and underscores the relevance of recent policy interventions in the lives of low-skilled minority men. C1 [Lyons, Christopher J.] Univ New Mexico, Dept Sociol, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA. [Pettit, Becky] Univ Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. RP Lyons, CJ (reprint author), Univ New Mexico, Dept Sociol, MSCO5 3083, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA, USA EM clyons@unm.edu; bpettit@u.washington.edu CR Rugh JS, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P629, DOI 10.1177/0003122410380868 Apel R, 2010, SOC PROBL, V57, P448, DOI 10.1525/sp.2010.57.3.448 U.S. Census Bureau, 2010, 2009 AM COMM SURV 1 Pettit B, 2009, LAW SOC REV, V43, P725 Pager D, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P777 Pager D, 2009, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V623, P195, DOI 10.1177/0002716208330793 Phillips JA, 2008, J QUANT CRIMINOL, V24, P51, DOI 10.1007/s10940-007-9038-y Fuller S, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P158 West Heather, 2008, PRISONERS 2007 *PEW RES CTR STAT, 2008, ON 100 BARS AM 2008 Huebner BM, 2007, JUSTICE Q, V24, P156, DOI 10.1080/07418820701201073 Clear Todd R., 2007, IMPRISONING COMMUNIT Pager Devah, 2007, MARKED RACE CRIME FI Bushway S., 2007, BARRIERS REENTRY LAB, P1 Raphael S., 2007, PRICE INDEPENDENCE E, P278 PETTIT B, 2007, BARRIERS REENTRY LAB, P203 Wu HY, 2007, ECON INQ, V45, P24, DOI 10.1111/j.1465-7295.2006.00002.x PAGER D, 2007, IMPACT INCARCERATION, P151 Phillips JA, 2006, SOC SCI RES, V35, P948, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2005.07.002 Kling JR, 2006, AM ECON REV, V96, P863, DOI 10.1257/aer.96.3.863 Western Bruce, 2006, PUNISHMENT INEQUALIT Beckett K, 2005, SOC PROBL, V52, P419, DOI 10.1525/sp.2005.52.3.419 Eberhardt JL, 2004, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V87, P876, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.87.6.876 Maume DJ, 2004, SOC PROBL, V51, P505 Pettit B, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P151 Antecol H, 2004, J HUM RESOUR, V39, P564, DOI 10.2307/3559027 HEDEKER D, 2004, SAGE HDB QUANTITATIV, P215 Harding DJ, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V109, P676, DOI 10.1086/379217 Pager D, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V108, P937, DOI 10.1086/374403 Singer J. D., 2003, APPL LONGITUDINAL DA HOLZER HJ, 2003, EMPLOYMENT BARRIERS Correll J, 2002, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V83, P1314, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.83.6.1314 Western B, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P526, DOI 10.2307/3088944 GREENE JP, 2002, SCH GRADUATION RATES Grodsky E, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P542, DOI 10.2307/3088922 Clear TR, 2001, CRIME DELINQUENCY, V47, P335, DOI 10.1177/0011128701047003003 Western B, 2001, CRIME DELINQUENCY, V47, P410, DOI 10.1177/0011128701047003007 PAYNE BK, 2001, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V81, P1 Uggen C, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P529, DOI 10.2307/2657381 Rank MR, 1999, J MARRIAGE FAM, V61, P1058, DOI 10.2307/354024 Anderson E., 1999, CODE STREET DECENCY Snijders T, 1999, MULTILEVEL ANAL INTR Kornfeld R, 1999, J LABOR ECON, V17, P168, DOI 10.1086/209917 Bushway SD, 1998, J RES CRIME DELINQ, V35, P454, DOI 10.1177/0022427898035004005 Bridges GS, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P554, DOI 10.2307/2657267 Nagin D, 1998, INT REV LAW ECON, V18, P25, DOI 10.1016/S0144-8188(97)00055-0 Darity WA, 1998, J ECON PERSPECT, V12, P63 Darity W. A., 1998, PERSISTENT DISPARITY Bowen W., 1998, SHAPE RIVER Jargowsky P, 1997, POVERTY PLACE GHETTO DUROSE MATTHEW R., 2007, CRACK AM DEMON DRUGS, P1 Holzer Harry J., 1996, WHAT EMPLOYERS WANT HORNEY J, 1995, AM SOCIOL REV, V60, P655, DOI 10.2307/2096316 GROGGER J, 1995, Q J ECON, V110, P51, DOI 10.2307/2118510 Bourgois P, 1995, SEARCH RESPECT SELLI Oliver M. L., 1995, BLACK WEALTH WHITE W HAGAN J, 1993, CRIMINOLOGY, V31, P465, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.1993.tb01138.x Denton Nancy A., 1993, AM APARTHEID SEGREGA GRANOVETTER M, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V78, P1360 KIRSCHENMAN J, 1991, RACE ETHNIC CONFLICT, P152 SMITH JP, 1989, J ECON LIT, V27, P519 Sullivan M., 1989, GETTING PAID YOUTH C HECKMAN J, 1989, QUESTION DISCRIMINAT, P50 MYERS SL, 1983, SOC SCI QUART, V64, P655 ROSENFELD RA, 1980, AM SOCIOL REV, V45, P583, DOI 10.2307/2095010 BURSTEIN P, 1979, AM SOCIOL REV, V44, P367, DOI 10.2307/2094880 HOFFMAN S, 1978, 5000 AM FAMILIES PAT, P247 DUNCAN BL, 1976, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V34, P590, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.34.4.590 BECKER GS, 1968, J POLIT ECON, V76, P169, DOI 10.1086/259394 NR 69 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD MAY PY 2011 VL 58 IS 2 BP 257 EP 280 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.2.257 PG 24 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 757YL UT WOS:000290124700005 ER PT J AU Braun, YA AF Braun, Yvonne A. TI The Reproduction of Inequality: Race, Class, Gender, and the Social Organization of Work at Sites of Large-Scale Development Projects SO SOCIAL PROBLEMS LA English DT Article DE social organization of work; race, class, and gender; development and globalization; masculinities; inequalities; Lesotho ID GLOBALIZATION; WOMENS; EXPERIENCES; RETHINKING; LESOTHO AB Large-scale dam and infrastructure projects remain common and controversial means toward development and poverty reduction in the Global South. Development authorities often promote employment of local people as part of development and as a promise made to "sell" projects locally. Are these promises of employment fulfilled? And what are the race, class, and gendered consequences of the employment practices implemented at the sites of large-scale development projects? How the social organization of work at the sites of large-scale development projects may create and constitute particular dynamics of inequality has been understudied. This article analyzes the social organization of work at one dam site of a large-scale multidam infrastructure development project, the Lesotho Highlands Water Project (LHWP). Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in 1997 and 2000-2002 in two communities proximate to Katse Dam, I center my analysis on the social organization of work with two goals: first, I render visible the gendered, classed, and raced ways that bodies and labor are organized in the context of this megaproject, both producing and constituting global and local inequalities; and, second, I show how masculinities are mobilized hierarchically to privilege an international hegemonic masculinity over local masculinities, and how the gender order is largely maintained by excluding women from the "privileges" of development through keeping women second-class citizens. These conclusions raise critical questions regarding how work is organized at the sites of large-scale development projects, and suggest we give greater attention to how the sites of development may reproduce inequalities based in race, class, gender, and global status. C1 Univ Oregon, Dept Womens & Gender Studies, Eugene, OR 97403 USA. RP Braun, YA (reprint author), Univ Oregon, Dept Womens & Gender Studies, 1298 Univ Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403 USA, USA EM ybraun@uoregon.edu CR *ENC BRIT, 2011, BRIT BOOK YEAR 2006 *CIA, 2010, CIA WORLD FACTB LES BRAUN YA, 2010, EQUALITY DIVERSITY I, V29, P78 *WORLD BANK, 2010, PROJ PERF ASS REP LE Berg B. L., 2009, QUALITATIVE RES METH Eisenstein Hester, 2009, FEMINISM SEDUCED GLO BASU R, 2009, GENDER DEV, V17, P231 Hussain M., 2008, INTERROGATING DEV ST McMichael P., 2008, DEV SOCIAL CHANGE GL Li T., 2007, WILL IMPROVE GOVT DE *UN LES, 2007, UN DEV ASS FRAM 2008 Acker J, 2006, CLASS QUESTIONS FEMI *GLOB POL NETW, 2006, COUNTR REP LES SCUDDER T, 2006, FUTURE LARGE DARNS D BENNETT M, 2006, FUTURE TEXTILE CLOTH, P165 BRAUN YA, 2006, GLOBALIZATION ENV, P151 Connell RW, 2005, GENDER SOC, V19, P829, DOI 10.1177/0891243205278639 McCall L, 2005, SIGNS, V30, P1771, DOI 10.1086/426800 Smith D. E., 2005, I ETHNOGRAPHY SOCIOL Mosse D., 2005, CULTIVATING DEV ETHN Bunker SG, 2005, GLOBALIZATION RACE R MOGHADAM VALENTINE M., 2005, GLOBALIZING WOMEN TR Connell RW, 2005, MEN MASC, V7, P347, DOI 10.1177/1097184X03260969 BARRIENTOS S, 2005, J INT DEV, V17, P259, DOI 10.1002/jid.1213 Braun YA, 2005, ADV GEND RES, V9, P29, DOI 10.1016/S1529-2126(05)09002-8 *LHDA, 2005, EC IMP PHAS 1 LES HI JACKSON J, 2005, GLOBALIZERS DEV WORK *LHDA, 2005, QUEST 5 *LHDA, 2005, QUEST 6 Braun YA, 2005, RES RURAL SOCIOL DEV, V10, P373, DOI 10.1016/S1057-1922(05)10017-1 Ampofo AA, 2004, GENDER SOC, V18, P685, DOI 10.1177/0891243204269188 Khagram Sanjeev, 2004, DAMS DEV TRANSNATION Pyle JL, 2003, INT SOCIOL, V18, P461, DOI 10.1177/02685809030183002 Beneria L., 2003, GENDER DEV GLOBALIZA Hassan F., 2002, LESOTHO DEV CHALLENG EASTWOOD LE, 2002, THESIS SYRACUSE U SY LETUKA P, 2002, VIOLENCE WOMEN HUMAN Martin PY, 2001, ORGANIZATION, V8, P587, DOI 10.1177/135050840184003 Katz C, 2001, SIGNS, V26, P1213, DOI 10.1086/495653 Freeman C, 2001, SIGNS, V26, P1007, DOI 10.1086/495646 Bergeron S, 2001, SIGNS, V26, P983, DOI 10.1086/495645 MCCULLY P, 2001, SILENCED RIVERS ECOL HEARN J, 2001, GENDER SEXUALITY VIO WCD, 2000, DAMS DEV NEW FRAM DE Epprecht M, 2000, THIS MATTER WOMEN IS ROY A, 2000, ALGEBRA INFINITE JUS Crewe E., 1999, WHOSE DEV ETHNOGRAPH CONNELL RW, 1998, MEN MASC, V1, P3, DOI 10.1177/1097184X98001001001 SITTIRAK S, 1998, DAUGHTERS DEV WOMEN Visvanathan Nalini, 1997, WOMEN GENDER DEV REA LETUKA P, 1997, INEQUALITIES WOMEN L POTTINGER L, 1996, WORLD RIVERS REV, V11, P3 Escobar Arturo, 1995, ENCOUNTERING DEV MAK Connell R. W., 1995, MASCULINITIES Kabeer N, 1994, REVERSED REALITIES G GIANOTTEN V, 1994, ASSESSING GENDER IMP TILLMAN G, 1994, LESOTHO HIGHLANDS WA *SECH CONS, 1994, POV LES 1994 MAPP EX *SECH CONS, 1994, SECH INT DETTER A, 1994, TRANSFORMATIONS CAUS *POE, 1991, REP LHDA WORLD BANK Ferguson James, 1990, ANTIPOLITICS MACHINE Enloe Cynthia, 1989, BANANAS BEACHES BASE TSHABALALA M, 1989, 1988 SOCIOECONOMIC C, V1 SEN Gita, 1987, DEV CRISES ALTERNATI *LHDA, 1986, LHDA ORD 1986 Murray C., 1981, FAMILIES DIVIDED IMP Boserup Esther, 1970, WOMANS ROLE EC DEV NR 68 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS PI BERKELEY PA C/O JOURNALS & DIGITAL PUBLISHING DIVISION, 2000 CENTER ST, STE 303, BERKELEY, CA 94704-1223 USA SN 0037-7791 J9 SOC PROBL JI Soc. Probl. PD MAY PY 2011 VL 58 IS 2 BP 281 EP 303 DI 10.1525/sp.2011.58.2.281 PG 23 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 757YL UT WOS:000290124700006 ER PT J AU MacKenzie, D AF MacKenzie, Donald TI The Credit Crisis as a Problem in the Sociology of Knowledge SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID MARKETS AB This article analyzes the role in the credit crisis of the processes by which market participants produce knowledge about financial instruments. Employing documentary sources and 87 predominantly oral history interviews, the article presents a historical sociology of the clusters of evaluation practices surrounding ABSs (asset-backed securities, most importantly mortgage-backed securities) and CDOs (collateralized debt obligations). Despite the close structural similarity between ABSs and CDOs, these practices came to differ substantially and became the province (e.g., in the rating agencies) of organizationally separate groups. In consequence, when ABS CDOs (CDOs in which the underlying assets are ABSs) emerged, they were evaluated in two separate stages. This created a fatally attractive arbitrage opportunity, large-scale exploitation of which sidelined previously important gatekeepers (risk-sensitive investors in the lower tranches of mortgage-backed securities) and eventually magnified and concentrated the banking system's calamitous mortgage-related losses. C1 Univ Edinburgh, Sch Social & Polit Sci, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland. RP MacKenzie, D (reprint author), Univ Edinburgh, Sch Social & Polit Sci, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland EM d.mackenzie@ed.ac.uk CR Morgan G, 2010, SOCIO-ECON REV, V8, P17, DOI 10.1093/ser/mwp025 Lewis M, 2010, BIG SHORT INSIDE DOO Karpik L., 2010, VALUING UNIQUE EC SI Lounsbury M., 2010, MARKETS TRIAL EC SOC FLIGSTEIN N, 2010, ANATOMY MORTGAGE SEC, P29 GUILLEN MF, 2010, GLOBAL CRISIS 2007 2, P257 CARRUTHERS B, 2010, KNOWLEDGE LIQUIDITY, P157 SCHEINBERG M, 2010, REGULATING REDESIGNI, P281 RONATAS A, 2010, ROLE RATINGS SUBPRIM, P115 POZNER JE, 2010, TERMINAL ISOMORPHISM, P183 GOETZMANN WN, 2010, 15650 NAT BUR EC RES Poon M, 2009, ACCOUNT ORG SOC, V34, P654, DOI 10.1016/j.aos.2009.02.003 Coval JD, 2009, AM ECON REV, V99, P628, DOI 10.1257/aer.99.3.628 Beckert J, 2009, THEOR SOC, V38, P245, DOI 10.1007/s11186-008-9082-0 Huault I, 2009, ORGAN STUD, V30, P549, DOI 10.1177/0170840609106113 Aspers P, 2009, THEOR SOC, V38, P111, DOI 10.1007/s11186-008-9078-9 Nunn N, 2009, ANNU REV ECON, V1, P65, DOI 10.1146/annurev.economics.050708.143336 McDonald Lawrence, 2009, COLOSSAL FAILURE COM Stark D, 2009, SENSE OF DISSONANCE: ACCOUNTS OF WORTH IN ECONOMIC LIFE, P1 Tett G, 2009, FOOLS GOLD UNRESTRAI Zuckerman Gregory, 2009, GREATEST TRADE EVER Calomiris CW, 2009, J STRUCTURED FINANCE, V15, P6, DOI 10.3905/JSF.2009.15.1.006 Ashcraft A., 2009, MBS RATINGS MORTGAGE SHIVDASANI A, 2009, DID STRUCTURED CREDI TURNER A, 2009, FINANCIAL CRISIS FUT SAKOUI A, 2009, FINANCIAL TIMES 0721, P32 TETT G, 2009, FINANCIAL TIMES 0821, P26 BENMELECH E, 2009, NBER MACROECON ANN, V24, P161 ERTURK E, 2009, STRUCTURED FINANCE R BARNETTHART AK, 2009, THESIS HARVARD COLL QUINN S, 2009, THINGS SHREDS PATCHE MEYER JW, 2009, WORLD SOC WRITINGS J, P36 FOURCADE M, 2009, 3 C EC SOC POL EC LO Sanders A, 2008, J HOUS ECON, V17, P254, DOI 10.1016/j.jhe.2008.10.001 Rajan U., 2008, FAILURE MODELS PREDI International Monetary Fund (IMF), 2008, GLOB FIN STAB REP FI Keys BJ., 2008, DID SECURITIZATION L FENDER I, 2008, BIS Q REV SEP, P67 ADELSON MH, 2008, J STRUCTURED FINANCE, V14, P12, DOI 10.3905/jsf.2008.706227 ONARAN Y, 2008, BLOOMBERG MARKET FEB, P42 SMITH EB, 2008, BRINGING WALL STRET DERHOVANESIAN M, 2008, BUSINESS WEEK NOV, V24, P71 HU J, 2008, CLOS HIST STRUCTURE 2008, ECONOMIST 0308, V386, P95 HUGHES J, 2008, FINANCIAL TIMES 0918, P11 NEWMAN D, 2008, J FIXED INCOME, V18, P32, DOI 10.3905/jfi.2008.712348 GARCIA J, 2008, ONE FACTOR MODELS AB SMITH EB, 2008, RACE BOTTOM MOODYS S *SEC IND FIN MARK, 2008, REST CONF SEC MARK ADELSON M, 2008, RISK MANAGEMENT LESS *UBS AG, 2008, SHAR REP UBSS WRIT D *SEC EXCH COMM, 2008, SUMM REP ISS ID COMM Ortiz H, 2008, THESIS ECOLE HAUTES MIAN A, 2008, 13936 NAT BUR EC RES BHARDWAJ G, 2008, 200909S TILB U EUR B Muniesa F, 2007, ECON SOC, V36, P377, DOI 10.1080/03085140701428340 Espeland WN, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P1, DOI 10.1086/517897 Cantor R., 2007, J FIXED INCOME, V17, P13, DOI 10.3905/jfi.2007.695282 Poon M, 2007, SOCIOL REV MONOGR, P284 HU J, 2007, ASSESSING CREDIT RIS LUCAS DJ, 2007, CDO FUNDAMENTALS 2007, CREDITFLUX NEWSL DEC HAGGER E, 2007, CREDITFLUX NEWSL MAR KHADEM V, 2007, HDB STRUCTURED FINAN, P543 GOODMAN LS, 2007, J FIXED INCOME, V17, P85, DOI 10.3905/jfi.2007.700215 Fabozzi FJ, 2007, MORTGAGE BACKED SECU ADELSON M, 2007, REPORT LAS VEGAS 200 ROY R, 2007, STRUCTURED CREDIT HD, P335 Boltanski L, 2006, JUSTIFICATION EC WOR ADELSON M, 2006, BOND RATING CONFUSIO *IMF, 2006, GLOB FIN STAB REP MA MCELRAVEY J, 2006, HDB MORTGAGE BACKED, P363 TUNG J, 2006, MEASURING LOSS GIVEN ADELSON M, 2006, RATING SHOPPING NOW ADELSON M, 2006, REPORT LAS VEGAS COV ADELSON M, 2006, REPORT ORLANDO 2006 Green RK, 2005, J ECON PERSPECT, V19, P93, DOI 10.1257/089533005775196660 Podolny JM, 2005, STATUS SIGNALS: A SOCIOLOGICAL STUDY OF MARKET COMPETITION, P1 Sinclair Timothy J., 2005, NEW MASTERS CAPITAL Aspers Patrik, 2005, MARKETS FASHION PHEN Velthuis O., 2005, TALKING PRICES SYMBO CHAPLIN G, 2005, CREDIT DERIVATIVES R WHETTEN M, 2005, CDO CDS UPDATE 04 25 DAMOUNI N, 2005, CREDIT 0401 FAHMY D, 2005, CREDIT 0501 TOUTAIN O, 2005, MOODYS REVISITS ITS EYMARDDUVERNAY F, 2005, POSTAUTISTIC EC REV, V34 ERTURK E, 2005, PRINCIPAL REPAYMENT CHEN N, 2005, YOUNG RESTLESS CORRE Beunza D, 2004, IND CORP CHANGE, V13, P369, DOI 10.1093/icc/dth015 Collins H, 2004, GRAVITYS SHADOW SEAR GILL K, 2004, GLOBAL RATING CRITER PARISI F, 2004, LOSS CORRELATIONS US FU Y, 2004, MOODYS REVISITS ITS PERRAUDIN W, 2004, STRUCTURED CREDIT PR, V2, P283 Stuart G., 2003, DISCRIMINATING RISK REOCH R, 2003, CREDIT DERIVATIVES D, P7 ZELTER JM, 2003, HIGHLIGHTS FITCHS NE ADELSON MH, 2003, J FIXED INCOME, V13, P53, DOI 10.3905/jfi.2003.319360 Keller E. F., 2002, MAKING SENSE LIFE EX White H. C., 2002, MARKETS NETWORKS Lazega Emmanuel, 2002, CONVENTIONS STRUCTUR BERGMAN S, 2001, CDO EVALUATOR APPL C HARRIS G, 2001, COMMONLY ASKED CDO Q RULE D, 2001, FINANCIAL STABIL JUN, P117 LI D.X., 2000, J FIXED INCOME, V9, P43, DOI 10.3905/jfi.2000.319253 Daston L, 2000, BIOGRAPHIES SCI OBJE, P1 *1 UN SEC INC, 2000, CDO Q REV 0823 Carruthers BG, 1999, THEOR SOC, V28, P353, DOI 10.1023/A:1006903103304 Knorr Cetina K., 1999, EPISTEMIC CULTURES S LI DX, 1999, CREDITMETRICS MO APR, P34 *STAND POORS, 1999, GLOB CBO CLO CRIT TOWER J, 1999, SEATTLE TIMES 1019 Smith C.W., 1999, SUCCESS SURVIVAL WAL Gupton G.M., 1997, CREDITMETRICS TECHNI Rheinberger Hans-Jorg, 1997, HIST EPISTEMIC THING Galison P., 1997, IMAGE LOGIC MAT CULT Baxter M., 1996, FINANCIAL CALCULUS I Barnes B., 1996, SCI KNOWLEDGE SOCIOL Vaughan D., 1996, CHALLENGER LAUNCH DE Abolafia M. Y., 1996, MAKING MARKETS OPPOR GALISON P, 1996, DISUNITY SCI BOUNDAR CIFUENTES A, 1996, BINOMIAL EXPANSION M Ranieri Lewis S, 1996, PRIMER SECURITIZATIO, P31 SNOWDEN KA, 1995, ANGLOAMERICAN FINANC, P261 Zelizer V., 1994, PRICING PRICELESS CH Cantor Richard, 1994, FEDERAL RESERVE SUM, p[1, 1994] PODOLNY JM, 1993, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P829, DOI 10.1086/230091 Sanford CS, 1993, CHANGING CAPITAL MARKETS: IMPLICATIONS FOR MONETARY POLICY, P227 David P., 1992, IND CORP CHANGE, V1, P129, DOI 10.1093/icc/1.1.129 Fabozzi FJ, 1992, MORTGAGE MORTGAGE BA Lave J., 1991, SITUATED LEARNING LE Vasicek O., 1991, LIMITING LOAN LOSS P LUCAS DJ, 1991, RATING CASH FLOW T B Bourdieu P., 1990, LOGIC PRACTICE HOURICAN TP, 1990, HDB ASSET BACKED SEC, P333 LEWIS M, 1990, LIARS POKER RISING W CANTOR AS, 1990, STANDARD POORS CREDI, V10, P1 CANTOR AS, 1990, STANDARD POORS CREDI, V10, P45 STAR SL, 1989, SOC STUD SCI, V19, P387, DOI 10.1177/030631289019003001 EYMARDDUVERNAY F, 1989, REV ECON, V40, P329, DOI 10.2307/3502117 SMITH CW, 1989, AUCTIONS SOCIAL CONS BHATTACHARYA AK, 1989, ADV INNOVATIONS BOND, P473 ROSENTHAL JA, 1988, SECURITIZATION CREDI BECKSTROM R, 1988, SWAP FINANCE, V1, P33 CAMIC C, 1986, AM J SOCIOL, V91, P1039, DOI 10.1086/228386 Bourdieu P, 1984, DISTINCTION SOCIAL C ARTHUR WB, 1984, OPTIONS APR, P10 WHITE HC, 1981, AM J SOCIOL, V87, P517, DOI 10.1086/227495 Zelizer V., 1979, MORALS MARKETS DEV L MERTON RC, 1974, J FINANC, V29, P449, DOI 10.2307/2978814 MERTON RC, 1973, BELL J ECON, V4, P141, DOI 10.2307/3003143 BLACK F, 1973, J POLIT ECON, V81, P637, DOI 10.1086/260062 FAMA EF, 1970, J FINANC, V25, P383, DOI 10.2307/2325486 Burns T., 1961, MANAGEMENT INNOVATIO Sklar A, 1959, PUBL I STAT U PARIS, V8, P229 BOGUE AG, 1955, MONEY INTEREST FARM Keynes J.M., 1936, GEN THEORY EMPLOYMEN NR 158 TC 4 Z9 4 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD MAY PY 2011 VL 116 IS 6 BP 1778 EP 1841 DI 10.1086/659639 PG 64 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 790QH UT WOS:000292603800002 ER PT J AU Ghaziani, A Baldassarri, D AF Ghaziani, Amin Baldassarri, Delia TI Cultural Anchors and the Organization of Differences: A Multi-method Analysis of LGBT Marches on Washington SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE culture; coherence; social movements; sexualities; networks ID SOCIAL-MOVEMENTS; UNITED-STATES; COLLECTIVE ACTION; FRAME ANALYSIS; NEWSPAPER DATA; GREAT-BRITAIN; IDENTITY; NETWORKS; POLITICS; TRANSFORMATION AB Social scientists describe culture as either coherent or incoherent and political dissent as either unifying or divisive. This article moves beyond such dichotomies. Content, historical, and network analyses of public debates on how to organize four lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) Washington marches provide evidence for an integrative position. Rather than just describe consistencies or contradictions, we contend that the key analytic challenge is to explain the organization of differences. We propose one way of doing this using the mechanism of a cultural anchor. Within and across marches, a small collection of ideas remains fixed in the national conversation, yet in a way that allows activists to address their internal diversity and respond to unfolding historical events. These results suggest that activists do not simply organize around their similarities but, through cultural anchors, they use their commonalities to build a thinly coherent foundation that can also support their differences. Situated at the nexus of culture, social movements, sexualities, and networks, this article demonstrates how the anchoring mechanism works in the context of LGBT political organizing. C1 [Ghaziani, Amin] Univ British Columbia, Dept Sociol, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1, Canada. [Baldassarri, Delia] Princeton Univ, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA. RP Ghaziani, A (reprint author), Univ British Columbia, Dept Sociol, 6303 NW Marine Dr, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1, Canada EM amin.ghaziani@ubc.ca CR Shwed U, 2010, AM SOCIOL REV, V75, P817, DOI 10.1177/0003122410388488 Stone AL, 2010, GLQ-J LESBIAN GAY ST, V16, P465, DOI 10.1215/10642684-2009-040 BALDASSARRI D, 2010, POLITICAL BELIEF NET Ghaziani A, 2009, THEOR SOC, V38, P581, DOI 10.1007/s11186-009-9096-2 Schaefer DR, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P551 Amenta E, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P636 Brown-Saracino J, 2009, CULT SOCIOL, V3, P51, DOI 10.1177/1749975508100671 Gould Deborah, 2009, MOVING POLITICS EMOT DIANI M, 2009, ACTA SOCIOL, V52, P85 Ghaziani Amin, 2008, DIVIDENDS DISSENT CO Kaminski E., 2008, IDENTITY WORK SOCIAL, P47 MUCCIARONI G, 2008, SAME SEX DIFFERENT P GOLDBERG A, 2008, ANN M AM SOC ASS BOS GHAZIANI A, 2008, INT J POLITICS CULTU, V20, P51, DOI 10.1007/s10767-008-9032-x Baldassarri D, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P735, DOI 10.1086/521839 Levitsky SR, 2007, MOBILIZATION, V12, P271 Smith T, 2007, POETICS, V35, P22, DOI 10.1016/j.poetic.2006.11.001 SMITH T, 2007, BOUNDARIES CONFLICT Polletta F., 2006, IT WAS FEVER STORYTE Alexander J., 2006, CIVIL SPHERE Ghaziani A, 2005, SOCIOL FORUM, V20, P523, DOI 10.1007/s11206-005-9057-0 Ortiz DG, 2005, MOBILIZATION, V10, P397 Burt Ronald S., 2005, BROKERAGE CLOSURE Stinchcombe Arthur L., 2005, LOGIC SOCIAL RES Lombard M., 2005, PRACTICAL RESOURCES Robinson P., 2005, QUEER WARS NEW GAY R BALDASSARRI D, 2005, SEMPLICE ARTE VOTARE Cornwell B, 2004, AM SOCIOL REV, V69, P862 Earl J, 2004, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V30, P65, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.30.012703.110603 FRANZOSI Roberto, 2004, WORDS NUMBERS NARRAT HUNT L, 2004, POLITICS CULTURE CLA Moody J, 2003, AM SOCIOL REV, V68, P103, DOI 10.2307/3088904 Creed WED, 2002, ORGAN SCI, V13, P475, DOI 10.1287/orsc.13.5.475.7814 Neuendorf KA, 2002, CONTENT ANAL GUIDEBO Borgatti S., 2002, UCINET WINDOWS SOFTW Armstrong Elizabeth A., 2002, FORGING GAY IDENTITI Polletta Francesca, 2002, FREEDOM IS ENDLESS M Tilly Charles, 2002, STORIES IDENTITIES P Creed WED, 2002, ORGAN RES METHODS, V5, P34, DOI 10.1177/1094428102051004 Eyerman Ron, 2002, QUALITATIVE SOCIOLOG, V25, P443, DOI 10.1023/A:1016042215533 BARBER L, 2002, MARCHING WASHINGTON DEMILIO J, 2002, WORLD TURNED ESSAYS Roscigno VJ, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P21, DOI 10.2307/2657392 Polletta F, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P283, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.27.1.283 Stemler S., 2001, PRACTICAL ASSESSMENT, V7 Swidler A, 2001, TALK LOVE CULTURE MA WAITE LG, 2001, OPPOSITIONAL CONSCIO, P170 Biernacki R, 2000, HIST THEORY, V39, P289, DOI 10.1111/0018-2656.00132 Mohr JW, 2000, POETICS, V28, P47, DOI 10.1016/S0304-422X(00)00024-3 Mische A, 2000, POETICS, V27, P163, DOI 10.1016/S0304-422X(99)00024-8 Bearman PS, 2000, POETICS, V27, P69, DOI 10.1016/S0304-422X(99)00022-4 Benford RD, 2000, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V26, P611, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.26.1.611 Kirsch Max H., 2000, QUEER THEORY SOCIAL SMITH N, 2000, CREATING CHANGE SEXU, P438 RICHARDS WD, 2000, J SOCIAL STRUCTURE, V1 KEEN L, 2000, STRANGERS LAW GAY PE Bearman P, 1999, SOC SCI HIST, V23, P501 Steinberg MW, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P736, DOI 10.1086/210359 Borgatti SP, 1999, SOC NETWORKS, V21, P375 Spillman L, 1999, AM J ECON SOCIOL, V58, P1047, DOI 10.1111/j.1536-7150.1999.tb03407.x Cohen Cathy J., 1999, BOUNDARIES BLACKNESS Sewell W.H., 1999, CULTURAL TURN NEW DI, P35 Smith Rogers, 1999, UNSTEADY MARCH RISE EPSTEIN S, 1999, GLOBAL EMERGENCE GAY, P30 Becker PE, 1998, SOC PROBL, V45, P451, DOI 10.1525/sp.1998.45.4.03x0175s Mohr JW, 1998, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V24, P345, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.24.1.345 Tarrow Sidney, 1998, POWER MOVEMENT LOUGHERY J, 1998, OTHER SIDE SILENCE M DORIAN P, 1998, PROBLEM SOLIDARITY T Bernstein M, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P531, DOI 10.1086/231250 Whittier N, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P760, DOI 10.2307/2657359 Balser DB, 1997, SOC FORCES, V76, P199, DOI 10.2307/2580323 Borgatti SP, 1997, SOC NETWORKS, V19, P243, DOI 10.1016/S0378-8733(96)00301-2 Gamson J, 1997, GENDER SOC, V11, P178, DOI 10.1177/089124397011002003 Tilly C, 1997, THEOR SOC, V26, P245, DOI 10.1023/A:1006836012345 Franzosi R, 1997, THEOR SOC, V26, P275, DOI 10.1023/A:1006888810997 Fligstein N, 1997, AM BEHAV SCI, V40, P397, DOI 10.1177/0002764297040004003 Castells M., 1997, POWER IDENTITY DiMaggio P, 1997, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V23, P263, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.263 Sewell WH, 1996, THEOR SOC, V25, P841, DOI 10.1007/BF00159818 Quinn N, 1996, ETHOS, V24, P391, DOI 10.1525/eth.1996.24.3.02a00010 Sahlin-Andersson K, 1996, TRANSLATING ORG CHAN, P69 CRIMP D, 1996, AIDS CULTURAL ANAL C LICHTERMAN P, 1995, SOC PROBL, V42, P513, DOI 10.1525/sp.1995.42.4.03x0130z GAMSON J, 1995, SOC PROBL, V42, P390, DOI 10.1525/sp.1995.42.3.03x0104z Johnston Hank, 1995, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS CUL, P41 Gould Roger V., 1995, INSURGENT IDENTITIES Gottdiener M., 1995, POSTMODERN SEMIOTICS Spillman L, 1995, CURR PERSPECT SOC TH, V15, P129 Streitmatter Roger, 1995, UNSPEAKABLE RISE GAY BEREZIN M, 1994, AM J SOCIOL, V99, P1237, DOI 10.1086/230411 Chauncey George, 1994, GAY NEW YORK GENDER Ragin Charles C., 1994, CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL Larana Enrique, 1994, NEW SOCIAL MOVEMENTS Strang D., 1994, I ENV ORG STRUCTURAL, P100 PRESS A, 1994, SOCIOLOGY CULTURE EM, P221 ENTMAN RM, 1993, J COMMUN, V43, P51, DOI 10.1111/j.1460-2466.1993.tb01304.x BEISEL N, 1993, AM SOCIOL REV, V58, P145, DOI 10.2307/2095963 BENFORD RD, 1993, SOC FORCES, V71, P677, DOI 10.2307/2579890 CARLEY K, 1993, SOCIOL METHODOL, V23, P75, DOI 10.2307/271007 WARNER M, 1993, FEAR QUEER PLANET QU, pR26 SHIVELY JE, 1992, AM SOCIOL REV, V57, P725, DOI 10.2307/2096119 SEWELL WH, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V98, P1 Gamson W. A, 1992, FRONTIERS SOCIAL MOV, P53 Burt R.S, 1992, STRUCTURAL HOLES Taylor V., 1992, FRONTIERS SOCIAL MOV, P104 Hannerz U., 1992, CULTURAL COMPLEXITY Strauss Claudia, 1992, HUMAN MOTIVES CULTUR Martin J, 1992, CULTURES ORG Friedman D., 1992, FRONTIERS SOCIAL MOV, p[156, 157] BONACICH P, 1992, ADV GROUP PROCESSES, V9, P21 BEARMAN PS, 1991, SOC FORCES, V70, P321, DOI 10.2307/2580242 ENTMAN RM, 1991, J COMMUN, V41, P6, DOI 10.1111/j.1460-2466.1991.tb02328.x KOLBE RH, 1991, J CONSUM RES, V18, P243, DOI 10.1086/209256 WAGNERPACIFICI R, 1991, AM J SOCIOL, V97, P376, DOI 10.1086/229783 Friedland R., 1991, NEW I ORG ANAL, P232 Huber J., 1991, MACRO MICRO LINKAGES, P51 Berube A., 1990, COMING OUT FIRE HIST TAYLOR V, 1989, AM SOCIOL REV, V54, P761, DOI 10.2307/2117752 GAMSON J, 1989, SOC PROBL, V36, P351, DOI 10.1525/sp.1989.36.4.03a00030 STAR SL, 1989, SOC STUD SCI, V19, P387, DOI 10.1177/030631289019003001 SCHUDSON M, 1989, THEOR SOC, V18, P153, DOI 10.1007/BF00160753 Gasser Les, 1989, DISTRIBUTED ARTIFICI, V2, P37 MUSHABEN J, 1989, INT SOCIAL MOVEMENT, V2, P267 Vicinus Martha, 1989, HIDDEN HIST RECLAIMI Melucci A., 1988, INT SOCIAL MOVEMENT, P329 Klandermans Bert, 1988, INT SOCIAL MOVEMENT, P173 GRISWOLD W, 1987, AM J SOCIOL, V92, P1077, DOI 10.1086/228628 Griswold W, 1987, SOCIOL METHODOL, V17, P1, DOI 10.2307/271027 SNOW DA, 1986, AM SOCIOL REV, V51, P464, DOI 10.2307/2095581 SWIDLER A, 1986, AM SOCIOL REV, V51, P273, DOI 10.2307/2095521 Santa Fe N. M, 1986, WRITING CULTURE POET CARLEY K, 1986, J MATH SOCIOL, V12, P137 COHEN JL, 1985, SOC RES, V52, P663 Sahlins M., 1985, ISLANDS HIST Giddens A, 1984, CONSTITUTION SOC Durkheim Emile, 1984, DIVISION LABOR SOC D'Andrade RG, 1984, CULTURE THEORY ESSAY, P88 ORTNER SB, 1984, COMP STUD SOC HIST, V26, P126 Anderson Benedict, 1983, IMAGINED COMMUNITIES D'Emilio J., 1983, SEXUAL POLITICS SEXU McAdam Douglas, 1982, POLITICAL PROCESS DE Carson C., 1981, STRUGGLE SNCC BLACK FINE GA, 1979, AM SOCIOL REV, V44, P733, DOI 10.2307/2094525 Tilly C., 1978, MOBILIZATION REVOLUT Williams Raymond, 1976, KEYWORDS VOCABULARY WHITE HC, 1976, AM J SOCIOL, V81, P730, DOI 10.1086/226141 Fishbein M., 1975, BELIEF ATTITUDE INTE Gamson William, 1975, STRATEGY SOCIAL PROT Collins Randall, 1975, CONFLICT SOCIOLOGY E BLAU PM, 1974, AM SOCIOL REV, V39, P615, DOI 10.2307/2094309 GRANOVET.MS, 1973, AM J SOCIOL, V78, P1360, DOI 10.1086/225469 Geertz Clifford, 1973, INTERPRETATION CULTU MEIER A, 1973, CORE STUDY CIVIL RIG BONACICH P, 1972, J MATH SOCIOL, V2, P113 Bonacich P., 1972, SOCIOL METHODOL, V4, P176, DOI 10.2307/270732 McGuire W. J, 1969, HDB SOCIAL PSYCHOL, V3, P136 Turner V, 1967, FOREST SYMBOLS Smelser Neil J., 1963, THEORY COLLECTIVE BE Levi-Strauss Claude, 1962, SAVAGE MIND LANG K, 1961, COLLECTIVE DYNAMICS COHEN J, 1960, EDUC PSYCHOL MEAS, V20, P37, DOI 10.1177/001316446002000104 MCGUIRE WJ, 1960, ATTITUDE ORGAN CHANG, P65 Mills C. W., 1959, SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINA Tylor E.B., 1958, PRIMITIVE CULTURE RE Coser L., 1956, FUNCTIONS SOCIAL CON Simmel G, 1955, CONFLICT WEB GROUP A Malinowski B., 1945, DYNAMICS CULTURE CHA Parsons T., 1937, STRUCTURE SOCIAL ACT Benedict R., 1934, PATTERNS CULTURE Mead M., 1928, COMING AGE SAMOA GOLDBERG A, AM J SOCIOL IN PRESS NR 172 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD APR PY 2011 VL 76 IS 2 BP 179 EP 206 DI 10.1177/0003122411401252 PG 28 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 751OU UT WOS:000289628200001 ER PT J AU Harris, A Evans, H Beckett, K AF Harris, Alexes Evans, Heather Beckett, Katherine TI Courtesy Stigma and Monetary Sanctions: Toward a Socio-Cultural Theory of Punishment SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE stigma; monetary sanctions; punishment ID FEDERAL SENTENCING GUIDELINES; RACIAL DISPARITIES; DECISION-MAKING; BARGAINING PRACTICES; JUDICIAL DISCRETION; SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION; CRIMINAL COURT; RACE; CRIME; BLACK AB Recent research suggests that the use of monetary sanctions as a supplementary penalty in state and federal criminal courts is expanding, and that their imposition creates substantial and deleterious legal debt. Little is known, however, about the factors that influence the discretionary imposition of these penalties. This study offers a comprehensive account of the role socio-cultural factors, especially race and ethnicity, have in this institutional sanctioning process. We rely on multilevel statistical analysis of the imposition of monetary sanctions in Washington State courts to test our theory. The theoretical framework emphasizes the need to treat race and ethnicity as complex cultural categories, the meaning and institutional effects of which may vary across time and space. Findings indicate that racialized crime scripts, such as the association of Latinos with drugs, affect defendants whose wrong-doing is stereotype congruent. Moreover, all individuals accused of committing racially and ethnically stigmatized offenses in racialized contexts may experience the courtesy stigma that flows from racialization. We find that race and ethnicity are not just individual attributes but cultural categories that shape the distribution of stigma and the institutional consequences that flow from it. C1 [Harris, Alexes; Evans, Heather; Beckett, Katherine] Univ Washington, Dept Sociol, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. [Evans, Heather] Univ Washington, Comparat Law & Soc Studies program, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. [Beckett, Katherine] Univ Washington, Soc & Justice Program, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. RP Harris, A (reprint author), Univ Washington, Dept Sociol, Box 353340, Seattle, WA 98195 USA EM yharris@uw.edu CR Harris A, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P1753 Schram SE, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P398 Sykes BL, 2009, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V623, P214, DOI 10.1177/0002716208330486 Pager D, 2009, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V621, P70, DOI 10.1177/0002716208324628 McLanahan S, 2009, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V621, P111, DOI 10.1177/0002716208324862 Ostrom Brian J., 2004, U MICH J LAW REFORM, V1, P755 Massoglia M., 2009, Contexts, V8, P38 O'Malley P, 2009, PUNISHM SOC, V11, P67 *US DRUG ENF ADM, 2009, DRUG TRENDS WASH Eitle D, 2008, SOC SCI RES, V37, P1102, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2008.05.005 Johnson BD, 2008, CRIMINOLOGY, V46, P737, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2008.00125.x Harris A, 2008, J CONTEMP ETHNOGR, V37, P469, DOI 10.1177/0891241607309886 Soss J, 2008, AM J POLIT SCI, V52, P536, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-5907.2008.00328.x Massoglia M, 2008, LAW SOC REV, V42, P275, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-5893.2008.00342.x Quillian L, 2008, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V71, P6 Chavez Leo, 2008, LATINO THREAT CONSTR Blackmon D., 2008, SLAVERY ANOTHER NAME BECKETT K, 2008, ASSESSMENT CONSEQUEN LEVINGSTON KD, 2008, PRISON LEGAL NEWS, V19, P4 PERKINSON R, 2008, TEXAS TOUGH RISE PRI Foster H, 2007, SOC PROBL, V54, P399, DOI 10.1525/sp.2007.54.4.399 Harris A, 2007, LAW SOC REV, V41, P387, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-5893.2007.00302.x Correll SJ, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V112, P1297, DOI 10.1086/511799 Comfort M, 2007, ANNU REV LAW SOC SCI, V3, P271, DOI 10.1146/annurev.lawsocsci.3.081806.112829 Simon J, 2007, GOVERNING CRIME WAR Clear Todd R., 2007, IMPRISONING COMMUNIT Pager Devah, 2007, MARKED RACE CRIME FI ROSENTHAL A, 2007, SENTENCING DOLLARS F MCLEAN RL, 2007, REPAYING DEBTS KING R, 2007, SOC FORCES, V85, P1254 Griffin T, 2006, CRIMINOLOGY, V44, P893, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2006.00067.x Harris LT, 2006, PSYCHOL SCI, V17, P847, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2006.01793.x Ulmer JT, 2006, CRIMINOLOGY, V44, P631, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2006.00059.x Green EGT, 2006, LAW HUMAN BEHAV, V30, P435, DOI 10.1007/s10979-006-9020-5 Johnson BD, 2006, CRIMINOLOGY, V44, P259, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2006.00049.x Uggen C, 2006, ANN AM ACAD POLIT SS, V605, P281, DOI 10.1177/0002716206286898 Manza J., 2006, LOCKED OUT FELON DIS Western Bruce, 2006, PUNISHMENT INEQUALIT Haney C., 2006, REFORMING PUNISHMENT LYONS W, 2006, PUNISHING SCH FEAR C JOHNSON RC, 2006, NATL POVERTY CTR WOR, V622 Western B, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P553, DOI 10.1086/432780 Bontrager S, 2005, CRIMINOLOGY, V43, P589, DOI 10.1111/j.0011-1348.2005.00018.x Johnson BD, 2005, CRIMINOLOGY, V43, P761, DOI 10.1111/j.0011-1348.2005.00023.x Pager D, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P355 Schlesinger T, 2005, JUSTICE Q, V22, P170, DOI 10.1080/07418820500088929 Steen S, 2005, CRIMINOLOGY, V43, P435, DOI 10.1111/j.0011-1348.2005.00013.x Frase RS, 2005, COLUMBIA LAW REV, V105, P1190 Morris EW, 2005, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V48, P25, DOI 10.1525/sop.2005.48.1.25 Travis Jeremy, 2005, THEY ALL COME BACK F Feldman S, 2005, AM J POLIT SCI, V49, P168, DOI 10.1111/j.0092-5853.2005.00117.x MIETHE TD, 2005, PUNISHMENT COMP HIST EBERHARDT JL, 2005, SOCIAL PSYCHOL PREJU, P219 Sampson RJ, 2004, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V67, P319 Eberhardt JL, 2004, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V87, P876, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.87.6.876 Wooldredge J, 2004, CRIMINOLOGY, V42, P417, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2004.tb00525.x Kurlychek MC, 2004, CRIMINOLOGY, V42, P485, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2004.tb00527.x Ruback RB, 2004, CRIME DELINQUENCY, V50, P168, DOI 10.1177/0011128703258943 Bobo L. D., 2004, DU BOIS REV, V1, P151 Demuth S, 2003, CRIMINOLOGY, V41, P873, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2003.tb01007.x Pager D, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V108, P937, DOI 10.1086/374403 Jones CS, 2003, BASIC APPL SOC PSYCH, V25, P1, DOI 10.1207/S15324834BASP2501_1 Engen RL, 2003, CRIMINOLOGY, V41, P99, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2003.tb00983.x Chiricos T, 2002, J RES CRIME DELINQ, V39, P400 Koons-Witt BA, 2002, CRIMINOLOGY, V40, P297, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2002.tb00958.x Raudenbush S.W., 2002, HIERARCHICAL LINEAR Braman D., 2002, INVISIBLE PUNISHMENT, P117 Quillian L, 2001, AM J SOCIOL, V107, P717, DOI 10.1086/338938 Jacobs D, 2001, SOC FORCES, V80, P61, DOI 10.1353/sof.2001.0070 Chiricos T, 2001, SOC PROBL, V48, P322, DOI 10.1525/sp.2001.48.3.322 Clear TR, 2001, CRIME DELINQUENCY, V47, P335, DOI 10.1177/0011128701047003003 Steffensmeier D, 2001, CRIMINOLOGY, V39, P145, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2001.tb00919.x Western Bruce, 2001, PUNISHM SOC, V3, P43, DOI 10.1177/14624740122228249 Mosher C, 2001, CRIME DELINQUENCY, V47, P84, DOI 10.1177/0011128701047001004 OLSON DE, 2001, JUSTICE SYST J, V22, P29 Britt CL, 2000, JUSTICE Q, V17, P707, DOI 10.1080/07418820000094731 Engen RL, 2000, CRIMINOLOGY, V38, P1207, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2000.tb01419.x Steffensmeier D, 2000, AM SOCIOL REV, V65, P705, DOI 10.2307/2657543 Engen RL, 2000, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P1357, DOI 10.1086/210433 Spohn C, 2000, CRIMINOLOGY, V38, P281, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2000.tb00891.x Merry SallyEngle, 2000, COLONIZING HAWAII CU WARR M, 2000, CRIMINAL JUSTICE 200, V4, P451 WESTERN B, 2000, FAMILIES CRIME CRIMI, P309 Hagan J, 1999, SOC PROBL, V46, P617, DOI 10.1525/sp.1999.46.4.03x0265e Western B, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V104, P1030, DOI 10.1086/210135 Snijders T, 1999, MULTILEVEL ANAL INTR Steffensmeier D, 1998, CRIMINOLOGY, V36, P763, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.1998.tb01265.x Bridges GS, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P554, DOI 10.2307/2657267 Marx A. W., 1998, MAKING RACE NATION C MANN C, 1998, IMAGES COLOR IMAGES DELGADO R, 1998, LATINO CONDITION CRI, P209 BECKETT K, 1998, NEW WAR DRUGS SYMBOL, P25 Tonry Michael, 1998, HDB CRIME PUNISHMENT Hurwitz J, 1997, AM J POLIT SCI, V41, P375, DOI 10.2307/2111769 Miller WI, 1997, ANATOMY DISGUST Beckett Katherine, 1997, MAKING CRIME PAY LAW Reinarman C., 1997, CRACK AM DEMON DRUGS Frohmann L, 1997, LAW SOC REV, V31, P531, DOI 10.2307/3054045 Daly K, 1997, CRIME JUSTICE, V22, P201, DOI 10.1086/449263 Albonetti CA, 1997, LAW SOC REV, V31, P789, DOI 10.2307/3053987 Ellsworth T., 1997, PRISON J, V77, P209, DOI 10.1177/0032855597077002006 Ulmer JT, 1996, CRIMINOLOGY, V34, P383, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-9125.1996.tb01212.x Martinez R, 1996, SOC PROBL, V43, P131 Tonry M, 1996, CRIME JUSTICE, V20, P99, DOI 10.1086/449242 Tonry Michael, 1996, SENTENCING MATTERS Oshinsky David M., 1996, WORSE SLAVERY PARCHM *BUR JUST ASS, 1996, US STRUCT FIN DAY FI WORD DL, 1996, 13 US CENS BUR POP D DEVINE PG, 1995, PERS SOC PSYCHOL B, V21, P1139, DOI 10.1177/01461672952111002 Gregory JF, 1995, J NEGRO EDUC, V64, P454, DOI 10.2307/2967267 DIXON J, 1995, AM J SOCIOL, V100, P1157, DOI 10.1086/230635 Almaguer T, 1994, RACIAL FAULT LINES H REEVES M, 1994, CRACKED COVERAGE TEL KRAMER J, 1993, SOCIOL QUART, V34, P357, DOI 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1993.tb00395.x PERKINS CR, 1993, 4 US BUR CENS POP DI NAGEL IH, 1992, SOUTHERN CALIF LAW R, V66, P501 SAVELSBERG JJ, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V97, P1346, DOI 10.1086/229904 HILLSMAN S, 1992, SMART SENTENCING EME, P123 ALBONETTI CA, 1991, SOC PROBL, V38, P247, DOI 10.1525/sp.1991.38.2.03a00090 FROHMANN L, 1991, SOC PROBL, V38, P213, DOI 10.1525/sp.1991.38.2.03a00070 Edsall Thomas, 1991, CHAIN REACTION IMPAC Garland D, 1990, PUNISHMENT MODERN SO Takaki Ronald, 1990, IRON CAGES RACE CULT BRIDGES GS, 1988, SOC FORCES, V66, P699, DOI 10.2307/2579572 Katz Phyllis, 1988, ELIMINATING RACISM P, P53 MULLANEY FG, 1988, EC SANCTIONS COMMUNI BRIDGES GS, 1987, SOC PROBL, V34, P345, DOI 10.1525/sp.1987.34.4.03a00030 MIETHE TD, 1987, J CRIM LAW CRIM, V78, P155, DOI 10.2307/1143578 DALY K, 1987, LAW SOC REV, V21, P267, DOI 10.2307/3053522 ALBONETTI CA, 1987, LAW SOC REV, V21, P291, DOI 10.2307/3053523 MYERS MA, 1986, SOC PROBL, V33, P236, DOI 10.1525/sp.1986.33.3.03a00060 Omi M., 1986, RACIAL FORMATION US MOORE CA, 1986, LAW SOC REV, V20, P253, DOI 10.2307/3053542 ZATZ MS, 1985, SOC PROBL, V33, P13, DOI 10.1525/sp.1985.33.1.03a00020 Durkheim Emile, 1984, DIVISION LABOR SOC ADAMSON CR, 1983, SOC PROBL, V30, P555, DOI 10.1525/sp.1983.30.5.03a00070 Lukes S, 1983, DURKHEIM LAW LISKA AE, 1982, SOC FORCES, V60, P760, DOI 10.2307/2578391 Hay Douglas, 1975, ALBIONS FATAL TREE C, P17 AKAIKE H, 1974, IEEE T AUTOMAT CONTR, VAC19, P716, DOI 10.1109/TAC.1974.1100705 Emerson RM, 1969, JUDGING DELINQUENTS Weber M., 1968, EC SOC Blalock H., 1967, THEORY MINORITY GROU Goffman E., 1963, STIGMA NOTES MANAGEM BLUMER H, 1958, PAC SOCIOL REV, V1, P3 GARFINKEL H, 1956, AM J SOCIOL, V61, P420, DOI 10.1086/221800 GOFFMAN E, 1956, AM J SOCIOL, V62, P264, DOI 10.1086/222003 Mead GH, 1918, AM J SOCIOL, V23, P577, DOI 10.1086/212795 *US BUR CENS, AM COMM SURV 2006 *US BUR JUST STAT, SURV INM STAT FED CO NR 150 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD APR PY 2011 VL 76 IS 2 BP 234 EP 264 DI 10.1177/0003122411400054 PG 31 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 751OU UT WOS:000289628200003 ER PT J AU Briscoe, F Kellogg, KC AF Briscoe, Forrest Kellogg, Katherine C. TI The Initial Assignment Effect: Local Employer Practices and Positive Career Outcomes for Work-Family Program Users SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE organizations; equal opportunity; social capital; law; work-family; work hours ID CIVIL-RIGHTS LAW; ORGANIZATIONAL COMMITMENT; FLEXIBILITY POLICIES; AFFIRMATIVE-ACTION; WAGE PENALTY; GENDER; MOTHERHOOD; WORKPLACE; NETWORKS; WOMEN AB One of the great paradoxes of inequality in organizations is that even when organizations introduce new programs designed to help employees in traditionally disadvantaged groups succeed, employees who use these programs often suffer negative career consequences. This study helps to fill a significant gap in the literature by investigating how local employer practices can enable employees to successfully use the programs designed to benefit them. Using a research approach that controls for regulatory environment and program design, we analyze unique longitudinal personnel data from a large law firm to demonstrate that assignment to powerful supervisors upon organization entry improves career outcomes for individuals who later use a reduced-hours program. Additionally, we find that initial assignment to powerful supervisors is more important to positive career outcomes-that is, employee retention and performance-based pay-than are factors such as supervisor assignment at the time of program use. Initial assignment affects career outcomes for later program users through the mechanism of improved access to reputation-building work opportunities. These findings have implications for research on work-family programs and other employee-rights programs and for the role of social capital in careers. C1 [Briscoe, Forrest] Penn State Univ, Smeal Coll Business, Dept Management & Org, University Pk, PA 16802 USA. [Kellogg, Katherine C.] MIT, Sloan Sch Management, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA. RP Briscoe, F (reprint author), Penn State Univ, Smeal Coll Business, Dept Management & Org, 450 Business Bldg, University Pk, PA 16802 USA EM fbriscoe@psu.edu CR Kellogg KC, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P657 Kay FM, 2009, SOCIOL INQ, V79, P418, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2009.00301.x Kalev A, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P1591 Dobbin F, 2009, INVENTING EQUAL OPPORTUNITY, P1 SILBEY SS, 2009, ANN SOCIOLOGIQUE, V59, P201 KELLY E, 2009, ACAD MANAGEMENT ANN, V2, P305 DAUSCHMIDT KG, 2009, MICH J GENDER L, V16, P49 MONG S, 2009, QUALITATIVE SOCIOLOG, V33, P1 Castilla EJ, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P1479, DOI 10.1086/588738 Skaggs S, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P1148, DOI 10.1086/522808 RIVERA L, 2008, HIRING INEQUALITY EL Burton MD, 2007, AM SOCIOL REV, V72, P239 Correll SJ, 2007, AM J SOCIOL, V112, P1297, DOI 10.1086/511799 Briscoe F, 2007, ORGAN SCI, V18, P297, DOI 10.1287/orsc.1060.0226 Roscigno V. J., 2007, FACE DISCRIMINATION Kelly E. L., 2007, ADV DEV HUMAN RESOUR, V9, P487, DOI DOI 10.1177/1523422307305489 Albiston C, 2007, ANNU REV LAW SOC SCI, V3, P397, DOI 10.1146/annurev.lawsocsci.3.081806.112803 THORNTON M, 2007, OSGOODE HALL LAW J, V45, P773 Gorman EH, 2006, SOC FORCES, V85, P865, DOI 10.1353/sof.2007.0004 Briscoe F, 2006, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V60, P88 Kalev A, 2006, LAW SOCIAL INQUIRY, V31, P855 Kalev A, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P589 Davis AE, 2006, WORK OCCUPATION, V33, P191, DOI 10.1177/0730888405280446 Fernandez RM, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P42 Kelly E, 2006, SOCIO-ECON REV, V4, P379, DOI DOI 10.1093/SER/MW1001 Bailyn L., 2006, BREAKING MOLD REDESI DiPrete TA, 2006, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V32, P271, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.32.061604.123127 Fernandez RM, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P859, DOI 10.1086/497257 Beckman CM, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P678 Allison PaulD, 2005, FIXED EFFECTS REGRES MASON MA, 2005, U CALIFORNIA FACULTY Cross R, 2004, ACAD MANAGE J, V47, P928 Sorensen JB, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P626, DOI 10.1086/426464 Blair-Loy M, 2004, SOCIOL PERSPECT, V47, P243, DOI 10.1525/sop.2004.47.3.243 Glass J, 2004, WORK OCCUPATION, V31, P367, DOI 10.1177/0730888404266364 Ridgeway CL, 2004, J SOC ISSUES, V60, P683, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-4537.2004.00380.x ALLISON PD, 2004, SURVIVAL ANAL USING Eaton SC, 2003, IND RELAT, V42, P145, DOI 10.1111/1468-232X.00285 Anderson DJ, 2003, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V56, P273, DOI 10.2307/3590938 Blair-Loy M., 2003, COMPETING DEVOTIONS Blair-Loy M, 2002, SOC FORCES, V80, P813, DOI 10.1353/sof.2002.0002 Ridgeway CL, 2001, J SOC ISSUES, V57, P637, DOI 10.1111/0022-4537.00233 Lyness KS, 2001, J APPL PSYCHOL, V86, P1167, DOI 10.1037//0021-9010.86.6.1167 Budig MJ, 2001, AM SOCIOL REV, V66, P204, DOI 10.2307/2657415 Lin N., 2001, SOCIAL CAPITAL THEOR, P3 Blair-Loy M, 2001, RES SOC WOR, V10, P51 Williams J., 2000, UNBENDING GENDER WHY Burt RS, 2000, RES ORGAN BEHAV, V22, P345, DOI 10.1016/S0191-3085(00)22009-1 Judiesch MK, 1999, ACAD MANAGE J, V42, P641, DOI 10.2307/256985 Kelly E, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V105, P455, DOI 10.1086/210317 Epstein C. F., 1999, PART TIME PARADOX TI Bisom-Rapp Susan, 1999, FLA ST U L REV, V26, P959 Gorman EH, 1999, LAW SOC REV, V33, P637, DOI 10.2307/3115106 Harlan SL, 1998, WORK OCCUPATION, V25, P397, DOI 10.1177/0730888498025004002 Kay FM, 1998, AM SOCIOL REV, V63, P728, DOI 10.2307/2657336 Dobbin F, 1998, AM J SOCIOL, V104, P441, DOI 10.1086/210044 Perlow LA, 1998, ADMIN SCI QUART, V43, P328, DOI 10.2307/2393855 Heimer C., 1998, SAKE CHILDREN SOCIAL Podolny JM, 1997, AM SOCIOL REV, V62, P673, DOI 10.2307/2657354 Heilman ME, 1997, ACAD MANAGE J, V40, P603, DOI 10.2307/257055 Biernat M, 1997, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V72, P544, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.72.3.544 Perlow L.A., 1997, FINDING TIME CORPORA Hochschild A. R., 1997, TIME BIND CHAMBLISS E, 1997, AM U L REV, V46, P669 KALLEBERG AL, 1996, WASHINGTON LEE LAW R, V52, P771 Osterman P, 1995, ADMIN SCI QUART, V40, P681, DOI 10.2307/2393758 GLASS J, 1995, WORK OCCUPATION, V22, P380, DOI 10.1177/0730888495022004002 JACOBSEN JP, 1995, MON LABOR REV, V118, P14 MORRILL C, 1995, EXECUTIVE WAY HAGAN J, 1995, GENDER PRACTICE STUD KALLEBERG AL, 1995, RES SOCIAL STRATIFIC, V14, P237 BRASS DJ, 1993, ACAD MANAGE J, V36, P441, DOI 10.2307/256588 IBARRA H, 1993, ACAD MANAGE REV, V18, P56, DOI 10.2307/258823 EDELMAN LB, 1993, LAW SOC REV, V27, P497, DOI 10.2307/3054103 Burt R.S., 1992, STRUCTURAL HOLES SOC EPSTEIN CF, 1992, CULTIVATING DIFFEREN, P232 Galanter M., 1991, TOURNAMENT LAWYERS T Acker J, 1990, GENDER SOC, V4, P139, DOI 10.1177/089124390004002002 EDELMAN LB, 1990, AM J SOCIOL, V95, P1401, DOI 10.1086/229459 Dobbin Frank, 1988, I PATTERNS ORG CULTU, P71 Thomas D.A., 1988, EMPLOYEE CAREER DEV, P49 EPSTEIN CF, 1981, WOMEN LAW KATZ R, 1980, RES ORGAN BEHAV, V2, P81 Van Maanen J., 1979, RES ORGAN BEHAV, V1, P209 Kanter Rosabeth Moss, 1977, WORK FAMILY US CRITI RUBIN DB, 1974, J EDUC PSYCHOL, V66, P688, DOI 10.1037/h0037350 Doeringer P., 1971, INTERNAL LABOR MARKE NR 87 TC 3 Z9 3 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD APR PY 2011 VL 76 IS 2 BP 291 EP 319 DI 10.1177/0003122411401250 PG 29 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 751OU UT WOS:000289628200005 ER PT J AU Srivastava, SB Banaji, MR AF Srivastava, Sameer B. Banaji, Mahzarin R. TI Culture, Cognition, and Collaborative Networks in Organizations SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE culture; cognition; collaboration; exponential random graph models; Implicit Association Test ID IMPLICIT ASSOCIATION TEST; SOCIAL NETWORKS; ROLE-IDENTITY; INDIVIDUALISM-COLLECTIVISM; REFLECTED APPRAISAL; PERSONAL NETWORKS; SELF-CONCEPT; INNOVATION; PREJUDICE; KNOWLEDGE AB This article examines the interplay of culture, cognition, and social networks in organizations with norms that emphasize cross-boundary collaboration. In such settings, social desirability concerns can induce a disparity between how people view themselves in conscious (i.e., deliberative) versus less conscious (i.e., automatic) cognition. These differences have implications for the resulting pattern of intra-organizational collaborative ties. Based on a laboratory study and field data from a biotechnology firm, we find that (1) people consciously report more positive views of themselves as collaborative actors than they appear to hold in less conscious cognition; (2) less conscious collaborative-independent self-views are associated with the choice to enlist organizationally distant colleagues in collaboration; and (3) these self-views are also associated with a person's likelihood of being successfully enlisted by organizationally distant colleagues (i.e., of supporting these colleagues in collaboration). By contrast, consciously reported collaborative-independent self-views are not associated with these choices. This study contributes to our understanding of how culture is internalized in individual cognition and how self-related cognition is linked to social structure through collaboration. It also demonstrates the limits of self-reports in settings with strong normative pressures and represents a novel integration of methods from cognitive psychology and network analysis. C1 [Srivastava, Sameer B.] Harvard Univ, Grad Sch Arts & Sci, Harvard Business Sch, Joint Program Sociol & Org Behav, Boston, MA 02163 USA. [Banaji, Mahzarin R.] Harvard Univ, Dept Psychol, Boston, MA 02163 USA. RP Srivastava, SB (reprint author), Harvard Univ, Grad Sch Arts & Sci, Harvard Business Sch, Joint Program Sociol & Org Behav, Morgan Hall T-69, Boston, MA 02163 USA EM ssrivastava@hbs.edu CR Vaisey S, 2010, SOC FORCES, V88, P1595 Cerulo KA, 2010, POETICS, V38, P115, DOI 10.1016/j.poetic.2009.11.005 Martin JL, 2010, SOCIOL FORUM, V25, P1, DOI 10.1111/j.1573-7861.2009.01154.x Pachucki MA, 2010, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V36, P205, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.012809.102615 Greenwald AG, 2009, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V97, P17, DOI 10.1037/a0015575 Robins G, 2009, SOC NETWORKS, V31, P105, DOI 10.1016/j.socnet.2008.10.006 Vaisey S, 2009, AM J SOCIOL, V114, P1675 Burke PJ, 2009, IDENTITY THEORY Tetlock PE, 2009, RES ORGAN BEHAV, V29, P3, DOI 10.1016/j.riob.2009.10.002 Jost JT, 2009, RES ORGAN BEHAV, V29, P39, DOI 10.1016/j.riob.2009.10.001 Totterdell P, 2008, SOC NETWORKS, V30, P283, DOI 10.1016/j.socnet.2008.04.003 Evans JSBT, 2008, ANNU REV PSYCHOL, V59, P255, DOI 10.1146/annurev.psych.59.103006.093629 Morris M., 2008, J STAT SOFTW, V24, P1 Wang P., 2008, PNET PROGRAM SIMULAT OMALLEY JA, 2008, HLTH SERVICES OUTCOM, V8, P222 SCHNABEL K, 2008, SAGE HDB PERSONALITY, P508 Lynch KD, 2007, J THEOR SOC BEHAV, V37, P379, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-5914.2007.00349.x Robins G, 2007, SOC NETWORKS, V29, P173, DOI 10.1016/j.socnet.2006.08.002 Fleming L, 2007, ORGAN SCI, V18, P165, DOI 10.1287/orsc.1060.0242 Lane K.A., 2007, IMPLICIT MEASURES AT, P59 Fiske S. T., 2007, SOCIAL COGNITION BRA Wittenbrink B., 2007, Implicit measures of attitude, P1 Lizardo O, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P778 Burke PJ, 2006, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V69, P81 Steglich C, 2006, METHODOLOGY, V2, P48, DOI 10.1027/1614-2241.2.1.48 Quillian L, 2006, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V32, P299, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.32.061604.123132 Snijders TAB, 2006, SOCIOL METHODOL, V36, P99, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9531.2006.00176.x *MILL SOFTW, 2006, INQ 2 0 60616 Obstfeld D, 2005, ADMIN SCI QUART, V50, P100 Zemljic B, 2005, SOC NETWORKS, V27, P73, DOI 10.1016/j.socnet.2004.11.010 Lieberman MD, 2004, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V87, P421, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.87.4.421 Arkes HR, 2004, PSYCHOL INQ, V15, P257, DOI 10.1207/s15327965pli1504_01 Banaji MR, 2004, PSYCHOL INQ, V15, P279 Mitchell JP, 2003, J EXP PSYCHOL GEN, V132, P455, DOI 10.1037/0096-3445.132.3.455 Hogg MA, 2003, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V66, P97 Hitlin S, 2003, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V66, P118, DOI 10.2307/1519843 Bechky BA, 2003, ORGAN SCI, V14, P312, DOI 10.1287/orsc.14.3.312.15162 Shah J, 2003, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V84, P661, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.84.4.661 Yeung KT, 2003, SOC FORCES, V81, P843, DOI 10.1353/sof.2003.0048 REYNOLDS LT, 2003, HDB SYMBOLIC INTERAC HOGG MA, 2003, SAGE HDB SOCIAL PSYC, P408 Feld SL, 2002, SOC NETWORKS, V24, P365, DOI 10.1016/S0378-8733(02)00013-8 Tsai WP, 2002, ORGAN SCI, V13, P179, DOI 10.1287/orsc.13.2.179.536 Brosig J, 2002, J ECON BEHAV ORGAN, V47, P275, DOI 10.1016/S0167-2681(01)00211-6 DiMaggio Paul, 2002, CULTURE MIND SOCIOLO, P274 Cerulo K., 2002, CULTURE MIND SOCIOLO Bargh JA, 2001, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V81, P1014, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.81.6.1014 Karpinski A, 2001, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V81, P774, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.81.5.774 Lowery BS, 2001, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V81, P842, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.81.5.842 Mehra A, 2001, ADMIN SCI QUART, V46, P121, DOI 10.2307/2667127 McPherson M, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P415, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.27.1.415 Swidler A, 2001, TALK LOVE Stryker S, 2000, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V63, P284, DOI 10.2307/2695840 Martin JL, 2000, POETICS, V28, P5, DOI 10.1016/S0304-422X(00)00010-3 Gecas V., 2000, SELF IDENTITY SOCIAL, P93 Krackhardt D, 1999, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V76, P770, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.76.5.770 Cast AD, 1999, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V62, P68, DOI 10.2307/2695826 Casciaro T, 1998, SOC NETWORKS, V20, P331, DOI 10.1016/S0378-8733(98)00008-2 Tsai WP, 1998, ACAD MANAGE J, V41, P464, DOI 10.2307/257085 McLean PD, 1998, AM J SOCIOL, V104, P51, DOI 10.1086/210002 Greenwald AG, 1998, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V74, P1464, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.74.6.1464 Mohr JW, 1998, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V24, P345, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.24.1.345 Burt RS, 1998, SOC NETWORKS, V20, P63, DOI 10.1016/S0378-8733(97)00005-1 Schwarz N, 1998, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V24, P239, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.24.1.239 DiMaggio P, 1997, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V23, P263, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.263 IBARRA H, 1995, ACAD MANAGE J, V38, P673, DOI 10.2307/256742 WAGNER JA, 1995, ACAD MANAGE J, V38, P152 GREENWALD AG, 1995, PSYCHOL REV, V102, P4, DOI 10.1037//0033-295X.102.1.4 KILDUFF M, 1994, ACAD MANAGE J, V37, P87, DOI 10.2307/256771 BANAJI MR, 1994, ONT SYMP P, V7, P55 FRANK RH, 1993, ETHOL SOCIOBIOL, V14, P247, DOI 10.1016/0162-3095(93)90020-I ICHIYAMA MA, 1993, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V56, P87, DOI 10.2307/2786999 CALLERO PL, 1992, SOC FORCES, V71, P485, DOI 10.2307/2580021 DOUGHERTY D, 1992, ORGAN SCI, V3, P179, DOI 10.1287/orsc.3.2.179 DEPAULO BM, 1992, PSYCHOL BULL, V111, P203, DOI 10.1037/0033-2909.111.2.203 Burt R.S., 1992, STRUCTURAL HOLES SOC CARLEY KM, 1991, SELF SOC DYNAMIC COG, P75, DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511527722.006 KRACKHARDT D, 1990, ADMIN SCI QUART, V35, P342, DOI 10.2307/2393394 MORGAN DL, 1990, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V53, P148, DOI 10.2307/2786676 COLEMAN JS, 1988, AM J SOCIOL, V94, pS95, DOI 10.1086/228943 CERULO KA, 1988, DECIPHERING VIOLENCE KRACKHARDT D, 1987, SOC NETWORKS, V9, P109, DOI 10.1016/0378-8733(87)90009-8 STRYKER S, 1987, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V50, P83, DOI 10.2307/2786893 MARKUS H, 1986, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V51, P858, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.51.4.858 WAGNER JA, 1986, GROUP ORGAN STUD, V11, P280, DOI 10.1177/105960118601100309 FELSON RB, 1986, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V49, P103, DOI 10.2307/2786722 SWIDLER A, 1986, AM SOCIOL REV, V51, P273, DOI 10.2307/2095521 Bourdieu P., 1986, DISTINCTION SOCIAL C Schein E. H, 1985, ORG CULTURE LEADERSH CALLERO PL, 1985, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V48, P203, DOI 10.2307/3033681 FELSON RB, 1985, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V48, P71, DOI 10.2307/3033783 WALKER G, 1985, ADMIN SCI QUART, V30, P103, DOI 10.2307/2392814 ASTLEY WG, 1984, ACAD MANAGE REV, V9, P104, DOI 10.2307/258237 FOMBRUN CJ, 1983, HUM RELAT, V36, P493, DOI 10.1177/001872678303600601 GECAS V, 1982, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V8, P1, DOI 10.1146/annurev.so.08.080182.000245 Rosenberg M, 1979, CONCEIVING SELF McCall George J., 1978, IDENTITIES INTERACTI MARKUS H, 1977, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V35, P63, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.35.2.63 NISBETT RE, 1977, PSYCHOL REV, V84, P231, DOI 10.1037/0033-295X.84.3.231 BURKE PJ, 1977, SOC FORCES, V55, P881, DOI 10.2307/2577560 THOMAS KW, 1975, ACAD MANAGE J, V18, P741, DOI 10.2307/255376 BLAU PM, 1970, AM SOCIOL REV, V35, P201, DOI 10.2307/2093199 WALTON RE, 1969, ADMIN SCI QUART, V14, P73, DOI 10.2307/2391364 LAWRENCE PR, 1967, ADMIN SCI QUART, V12, P1, DOI 10.2307/2391211 Thompson J. D., 1967, ORG ACTION SOCIAL SC Goffman E, 1959, PRESENTATION SELF EV MIYAMOTO SF, 1956, AM J SOCIOL, V61, P399, DOI 10.1086/221797 Lazarsfeld P., 1954, FREEDOM CONTROL MODE, P18 Cooley C. H., 1902, HUMAN NATURE SOCIAL NR 109 TC 1 Z9 1 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD APR PY 2011 VL 76 IS 2 BP 207 EP 233 DI 10.1177/0003122411399390 PG 27 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 751OU UT WOS:000289628200002 ER PT J AU Kelly, EL Moen, P Tranby, E AF Kelly, Erin L. Moen, Phyllis Tranby, Eric TI Changing Workplaces to Reduce Work-Family Conflict: Schedule Control in a White-Collar Organization SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE work-family conflict; flexibility; control; workplace; longitudinal ID DUAL-EARNER COUPLES; HOME INTERFERENCE; EMPLOYED PARENTS; TRADE-OFFS; JOB; TIME; ARRANGEMENTS; FLEXIBILITY; RESOURCES; SPILLOVER AB Work-family conflicts are common and consequential for employees, their families, and work organizations. Can workplaces be changed to reduce work-family conflict? Previous research has not been able to assess whether workplace policies or initiatives succeed in reducing work-family conflict or increasing work-family fit. Using longitudinal data collected from 608 employees of a white-collar organization before and after a workplace initiative was implemented, we investigate whether the initiative affects work-family conflict and fit, whether schedule control mediates these effects, and whether work demands, including long hours, moderate the initiative's effects on work-family outcomes. Analyses clearly demonstrate that the workplace initiative positively affects the work-family interface, primarily by increasing employees' schedule control. This study points to the importance of schedule control for our understanding of job quality and for management policies and practices. C1 [Kelly, Erin L.] Univ Minnesota, Dept Sociol, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA. [Tranby, Eric] Univ Delaware, Dept Sociol & Criminal Justice, Newark, DE 19716 USA. RP Kelly, EL (reprint author), Univ Minnesota, Dept Sociol, 909 Social Sci,267 19th Ave S, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA EM kelly101@umn.edu CR Hammer LB, 2011, J APPL PSYCHOL, V96, P134, DOI 10.1037/a0020927 Kelly EL, 2010, GENDER SOC, V24, P281, DOI 10.1177/0891243210372073 *WORKPL FLEX, 2010, LOW WAG WORK Schieman S, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P966 Blair-Loy M, 2009, WORK OCCUPATION, V36, P279, DOI 10.1177/0730888409343912 LAMBERT S, 2009, WORK LIFE POLICIES, P169 Moen P, 2008, J VOCAT BEHAV, V73, P414, DOI 10.1016/j.jvb.2008.08.002 Lambert SJ, 2008, HUM RELAT, V61, P1203, DOI 10.1177/0018726708094910 Kelly EL, 2008, ACAD MANAG ANN, V2, P305, DOI 10.1080/19416520802211610 Hill EJ, 2008, COMMUNITY WORK FAMIL, V11, P149 Golden L, 2008, J FAMILY EC ISSUES, V29, P86, DOI 10.1007/s10834-007-9090-7 SWANBERG JE, 2008, PSYCHOL MANAGER J, V11, P5, DOI DOI 10.1080/10887150801963836 RESSLER C, 2008, WBY WORK SUCKS FIX I Ammons SK, 2007, J FAM ISSUES, V28, P794, DOI 10.1177/0192513X07299682 Stone P, 2007, OPTING OUT: WHY WOMEN REALLY QUIT CAREERS AND HEAD HOME, P1 KELLY E, 2007, ADV DEV HUMAN RESOUR, V11, P487 Vallas SP, 2006, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P1677, DOI 10.1086/499909 Davis AE, 2006, WORK OCCUPATION, V33, P191, DOI 10.1177/0730888405280446 Kossek EE, 2006, J VOCAT BEHAV, V68, P347, DOI 10.1016/j.jvb.2005.07.002 Kelly E, 2006, SOCIO-ECON REV, V4, P379, DOI DOI 10.1093/SER/MW1001 Thompson CA, 2006, J OCCUP HEALTH PSYCH, V11, P100, DOI 10.1037/1076-8998.10.4.100 Reynolds J, 2005, J MARRIAGE FAM, V67, P1313, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2005.00219.x Mennino SF, 2005, SOCIOL QUART, V46, P107 Chesley N, 2005, J MARRIAGE FAM, V67, P1237, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2005.00213.x Johnson D, 2005, J MARRIAGE FAM, V67, P1061, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2005.00194.x Byron K, 2005, J VOCAT BEHAV, V67, P169, DOI 10.1016/j.jvb.2004.08.009 Nomaguchi KM, 2005, J FAM ISSUES, V26, P756, DOI 10.1177/0192513X05277524 Swanberg JE, 2005, J FAM ISSUES, V26, P866, DOI 10.1177/0192513X05277554 Weeden KA, 2005, SOC SCI RES, V34, P454, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2004.04.006 Moen P., 2005, CAREER MYSTIQUE CRAC MacDermid SM, 2005, LEAS ORG MAN SERIES, P19 Milkie MA, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P739, DOI 10.1111/j.0022-2445.2004.00050.x Bakker AB, 2004, WORK OCCUPATION, V31, P345, DOI 10.1177/0730888404266349 Voydanoff P, 2004, J MARRIAGE FAM, V66, P398, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2004.00028.x Berg P, 2004, IND LABOR RELAT REV, V57, P331, DOI 10.2307/4126655 Siegrist J, 2004, SOC SCI MED, V58, P1483, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(03)00351-4 Jansen NWH, 2004, SCAND J WORK ENV HEA, V30, P139 Jacobs J. A., 2004, TIME DIVIDE WORK FAM BELKIC KL, 2004, SCAND J WORK ENV HEA, V30, P81 GELMAN A, 2004, APPL BAYESIAN MODELI, P195 Vallas SP, 2003, SOC PROBL, V50, P204, DOI 10.1525/sp.2003.50.2.204 Batt R, 2003, IND RELAT, V42, P189, DOI 10.1111/1468-232X.00287 Berg P, 2003, IND RELAT, V42, P168, DOI 10.1111/1468-232X.00286 Blair-Loy M., 2003, COMPETING DEVOTIONS Jansen Nicole W. H., 2003, Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, V45, P479, DOI 10.1097/01.jom.0000063626.37065.e8 Mennino SF, 2002, WORK OCCUPATION, V29, P226, DOI 10.1177/0730888402029002005 Blair-Loy M, 2002, SOC FORCES, V80, P813, DOI 10.1353/sof.2002.0002 Shadish W. R., 2002, EXPT QUASIEXPERIMENT Townsend N. W., 2002, PACKAGE DEAL MARRIAG Rapoport R., 2002, WORK FAMILY BALANCE Kalleberg AL, 2001, BRIT J IND RELAT, V39, P479, DOI 10.1111/1467-8543.00211 Allen TD, 2001, J VOCAT BEHAV, V58, P414, DOI 10.1006/jvbe.2000.1774 Hill EJ, 2001, FAM RELAT, V50, P49, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3729.2001.00049.x Tausig M., 2001, J FAMILY EC ISSUES, V22, P101, DOI 10.1023/A:1016626028720 DEITCH CH, 2001, WORKING FAMILIES TRA, P103 VANHORN LM, 2001, J PSYCHOEDUCATIONAL, V19, P54 Bianchi SM, 2000, SOC FORCES, V79, P191, DOI 10.2307/2675569 Grzywacz JG, 2000, J MARRIAGE FAM, V62, P336, DOI 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2000.00336.x Williams J., 2000, UNBENDING GENDER WHY Becker PE, 1999, J MARRIAGE FAM, V61, P995, DOI 10.2307/354019 Thompson CA, 1999, J VOCAT BEHAV, V54, P392, DOI 10.1006/jvbe.1998.1681 Barnett R C, 1999, J Occup Health Psychol, V4, P307, DOI 10.1037//1076-8998.4.4.307 Barker K., 1998, CONTINGENT WORK AM E Frone MR, 1997, J OCCUP ORGAN PSYCH, V70, P325 Hammer LB, 1997, J VOCAT BEHAV, V50, P185, DOI 10.1006/jvbe.1996.1557 Perlow L.A., 1997, FINDING TIME CORPORA Galinsky E, 1996, J SOC ISSUES, V52, P111 Netemeyer RG, 1996, J APPL PSYCHOL, V81, P400, DOI 10.1037/0021-9010.81.4.400 Hays S., 1996, CULTURAL CONTRADICTI THOMAS LT, 1995, J APPL PSYCHOL, V80, P6, DOI 10.1037//0021-9010.80.1.6 MACKINNON DP, 1993, EVALUATION REV, V17, P144, DOI 10.1177/0193841X9301700202 Karasek R.A., 1990, HLTH WORK STRESS PRO BARON RM, 1986, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V51, P1173, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.51.6.1173 GREENHAUS JH, 1985, ACAD MANAGE REV, V10, P76, DOI 10.2307/258214 Karasek R, 1985, JOB CONTENT QUESTION Sobel M., 1982, SOCIOL METHODOL, V13, P290, DOI 10.2307/270723 JUDD CM, 1981, EVALUATION REV, V5, P602, DOI 10.1177/0193841X8100500502 KARASEK RA, 1979, ADMIN SCI QUART, V24, P285, DOI 10.2307/2392498 HECKMAN JJ, 1979, ECONOMETRICA, V47, P153, DOI 10.2307/1912352 Bronfenbrenner U, 1979, ECOLOGY HUMAN DEV EX NR 80 TC 0 Z9 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD APR PY 2011 VL 76 IS 2 BP 265 EP 290 DI 10.1177/0003122411400056 PG 26 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 751OU UT WOS:000289628200004 ER PT J AU King, MD Bearman, PS AF King, Marissa D. Bearman, Peter S. TI Socioeconomic Status and the Increased Prevalence of Autism in California SO AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW LA English DT Article DE neighborhoods; health gradient; autism; socioeconomic status; inequality ID SPECTRUM DISORDERS; DIAGNOSTIC SUBSTITUTION; RISK-FACTORS; PERINATAL FACTORS; LIFE-COURSE; IDENTIFICATION; EPIDEMIOLOGY; POPULATION; HEALTH; AGE AB The prevalence of autism has increased precipitously-roughly 10-fold in the past 40 years-yet no one knows exactly what caused this dramatic rise. Using a large and representative dataset that spans the California birth cohorts from 1992 through 2000, we examine individual and community resources associated with the likelihood of an autism diagnosis over time. This allows us to identify key social factors that have contributed to increased autism prevalence. While individual-level factors, such as birth weight and parental education, have had a fairly constant effect on likelihood of diagnosis over time, we find that community-level resources drive increased prevalence. This study suggests that neighborhoods dynamically interact with the people living in them in different ways at different times to shape health outcomes. By treating neighborhoods as dynamic, we can better understand the changing socioeconomic gradient of autism and the increase in prevalence. C1 [Bearman, Peter S.] Columbia Univ, Paul F Lazarsfeld Ctr Social Sci, New York, NY 10027 USA. [King, Marissa D.] Yale Univ, Sch Management, New Haven, CT 06520 USA. RP Bearman, PS (reprint author), Columbia Univ, Paul F Lazarsfeld Ctr Social Sci, CB3355, New York, NY 10027 USA EM psb17@columbia.edu CR Durkin MS, 2010, PLOS ONE, V5, DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0011551 Liu K, 2010, DEMOGRAPHY, V47, P327 Mazumdar S, 2010, HEALTH PLACE, V16, P539, DOI 10.1016/j.healthplace.2009.12.014 Liu KY, 2010, AM J SOCIOL, V115, P1387 Roux AVD, 2010, ANN NY ACAD SCI, V1186, P125, DOI 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2009.05333.x *RAND, 2010, RES HOUS SAL PRIC NU EYAL G, 2010, SOCIAL ORIGINS AUTIS King M, 2009, INT J EPIDEMIOL, V38, P1224, DOI 10.1093/ije/dyp261 King MD, 2009, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V99, P1673, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.2008.149021 Chang VW, 2009, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V50, P245 Singh J, 2009, J AUTISM DEV DISORD, V39, P788, DOI 10.1007/s10803-008-0685-0 Hertz-Picciotto I, 2009, EPIDEMIOLOGY, V20, P84, DOI 10.1097/EDE.0b013e3181902d15 AUCHINCLOSS A, 2009, AM J EPIDEMIOL, V168, P1 Durkin MS, 2008, AM J EPIDEMIOL, V168, P1268, DOI 10.1093/aje/kwn250 Coo H, 2008, J AUTISM DEV DISORD, V38, P1036, DOI 10.1007/s10803-007-0478-x Kaczynski AT, 2008, J PHYS ACT HEALTH, V5, P619 Pollitt RA, 2008, J EPIDEMIOL COMMUN H, V62, P484, DOI 10.1136/jech.2006.054106 Abrahams BS, 2008, NAT REV GENET, V9, P341, DOI 10.1038/nrg2346 Bishop DVM, 2008, DEV MED CHILD NEUROL, V50, P341, DOI 10.1111/j.1469-8749.2008.02057.x Sharkey P, 2008, AM J SOCIOL, V113, P931, DOI 10.1086/522804 Johnson CP, 2007, PEDIATRICS, V120, P1183, DOI 10.1542/peds.2007-2361 Christakis NA, 2007, NEW ENGL J MED, V357, P370, DOI 10.1056/NEJMsa066082 Kolevzon A, 2007, ARCH PEDIAT ADOL MED, V161, P326, DOI 10.1001/archpedi.161.4.326 Carson AP, 2007, ANN EPIDEMIOL, V17, P296, DOI 10.1016/j.annepidem.2006.07.009 Grinker R. R., 2007, UNSTRANGE MINDS REMA *CA DDS, 2007, DEP DEV SERV FACT BO INSEL T, 2007, INT M AUT RES SEATTL Grandjean P, 2006, LANCET, V368, P2167, DOI 10.1016/S0140-6736(06)69665-7 Windham GC, 2006, ENVIRON HEALTH PERSP, V114, P1438, DOI 10.1289/ehp.9120 Shattuck PT, 2006, PEDIATRICS, V117, P1028, DOI 10.1542/peds.2005-1516 *GOV ACC OFF, 2006, REP MAJ LEAD US SEN Baron-Cohen S, 2005, SCIENCE, V310, P819, DOI 10.1126/science.1115455 Larsson HJ, 2005, AM J EPIDEMIOL, V161, P916, DOI 10.1093/aje/kwi123 Lutfey K, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P1326, DOI 10.1086/428914 Mandell DS, 2005, ARCH PEDIAT ADOL MED, V159, P266, DOI 10.1001/archpedi.159.3.266 Barbaresi WJ, 2005, ARCH PEDIAT ADOL MED, V159, P37, DOI 10.1001/archpedi.159.1.37 Palmer RF, 2005, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V95, P125, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.2003.023077 Hultman CM, 2004, LANCET, V364, P485, DOI 10.1016/S0140-6736(04)16825-6 Glasson EJ, 2004, ARCH GEN PSYCHIAT, V61, P618, DOI 10.1001/archpsyc.61.6.618 Raudenbush S. W., 2004, HLM 6 CAMPBELL K, 2004, LINK KING Kawachi I, 2003, NEIGHBORHOODS HLTH, P1 Croen LA, 2002, J AUTISM DEV DISORD, V32, P217, DOI 10.1023/A:1015405914950 Croen LA, 2002, J AUTISM DEV DISORD, V32, P207, DOI 10.1023/A:1015453830880 Link BG, 2002, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V92, P730, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.92.5.730 Sampson RJ, 2002, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V28, P443, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.28.110601.141114 Wing L, 2002, MENT RETARD DEV D R, V8, P151, DOI 10.1002/mrdd.10029 ADLER N, 2002, HEALTH AFFAIR, V23, P60 PESCOSOLIDO BA, 2002, ROLE SOCIAL NETWORKS Eaton WW, 2001, J AUTISM DEV DISORD, V31, P279, DOI 10.1023/A:1010743203048 Fombonne E, 2001, PEDIATRICS, V107, P411, DOI 10.1542/peds.107.2.411 Matteson DW, 1998, SOC SCI MED, V47, P1841, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(98)00229-9 Pamuk E., 1998, SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS Link BG, 1998, MILBANK Q, V76, P375, DOI 10.1111/1468-0009.00096 Roberts EM, 1997, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V87, P597, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.87.4.597 Uzzi B, 1996, AM SOCIOL REV, V61, P674, DOI 10.2307/2096399 Phelan Jo, 1995, J HLTH SOCIAL BEHAV, V35, P80, DOI DOI 10.2307/2626958 RAFTERY AE, 1993, SOCIOL EDUC, V66, P41, DOI 10.2307/2112784 PESCOSOLIDO BA, 1992, AM J SOCIOL, V97, P1096, DOI 10.1086/229863 Baldwin W H, 1984, Popul Bull, V39, P1 PINEGAN JA, 1979, J CHILD PSYCHOL PSYC, V20, P119 FRESSE J, HDB SOCIOLO IN PRESS NR 62 TC 3 Z9 3 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0003-1224 J9 AM SOCIOL REV JI Am. Sociol. Rev. PD APR PY 2011 VL 76 IS 2 BP 320 EP 346 DI 10.1177/0003122411399389 PG 27 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 751OU UT WOS:000289628200006 ER PT J AU Dreiling, M Darves, D AF Dreiling, Michael Darves, Derek TI Corporate Unity in American Trade Policy: A Network Analysis of Corporate-Dyad Political Action SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID INTERLOCKING DIRECTORATES; ACTION COMMITTEES; ECONOMIC-POLICY; REGIME CHANGE; BUSINESS; STATE; FIRMS; POWER; TRANSFORMATION; PROTECTIONIST AB This essay examines factors that produce political unity among large U. S. corporations advocating free trade. Expanding on old debates, these data and analyses validate the importance of organizational and class cohesion approaches to corporate political action. Methodologically, the political unity of pairs (dyads) of firms in trade policy activism is analyzed with quadratic assignment procedure regression. Shared membership in prominent policy networks and board interlocks positively predict corporate political unity across three areas of trade policy influence, from the executive branch to the legislature. Non-network organizational indicators also significantly predicted corporate trade policy activism. The findings support business unity accounts of corporate political action and suggest that higher levels of firm embeddedness within intercorporate networks facilitate collective corporate political action. C1 [Dreiling, Michael; Darves, Derek] Univ Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403 USA. RP Dreiling, M (reprint author), 1291 Univ Oregon, Dept Sociol, Eugene, OR 97403 USA EM dreiling@uoregeon.edu CR Gates L, 2009, THEOR SOC, V38, P57, DOI 10.1007/s11186-008-9070-4 ANDERSON S, 2009, PEPPERDINE POLICY RE, V2 Ehrlich SD, 2008, INT STUD QUART, V52, P427, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-2478.2008.00508.x Burris V, 2008, RES POLIT SOCIOL, V17, P3, DOI 10.1016/S0895-9935(08)17002-4 Chorev N., 2007, REMAKING US TRADE PO Woods T, 2007, RES POLIT SOCIOL, V15, P177, DOI 10.1016/S0895-9935(06)15006-8 Darves D, 2007, RES POLIT SOCIOL, V15, P205, DOI 10.1016/S0895-9935(06)15007-X Ladewig JW, 2006, INT ORGAN, V60, P69, DOI 10.1017/S0020818306060036 Mizruchi MS, 2006, AM SOCIOL REV, V71, P310 Domhoff G. W., 2006, WHO RULES AM POWER P DUINA F, 2006, SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION GOLD D, 2006, SIGNIFICANCE TEST CO, P172 De Bievre D, 2005, COMP POLIT STUD, V38, P1271, DOI 10.1177/0010414005277578 Burris V, 2005, AM J SOCIOL, V111, P249, DOI 10.1086/428817 Chorev N, 2005, THEOR SOC, V34, P317, DOI 10.1007/s11186-005-6301-9 Harvey David, 2005, BRIEF HIST NEOLIBERA Destler I. M., 2005, AM TRADE POLITICS 2005, DIRECTORY AM FIRMS O Martin CJ, 2004, AM POLIT SCI REV, V98, P593 Mizruchi MS, 2004, THEOR SOC, V33, P579, DOI 10.1023/B:RYSO.0000045757.93910.ed Campbell John L, 2004, I CHANGE GLOBALIZATI Hillman AJ, 2004, J MANAGE, V30, P837, DOI 10.1016/j.jm.2004.06.003 COHEN SD, 2003, FUNDAMENTALS US FORE Moore G, 2002, SOC SCI QUART, V83, P726, DOI 10.1111/1540-6237.00111 Howlett M, 2002, CAN J POLIT SCI, V35, P235 Jessop B, 2002, FUTURE CAPITALIST ST Morck R, 2001, ECON INQ, V39, P365, DOI 10.1093/ei/39.3.365 SHOCH J, 2001, TRADING BLOWS PARTY Jenkins JC, 2000, SOCIOL FORUM, V15, P307, DOI 10.1023/A:1007573625240 Dreiling MC, 2000, SOC PROBL, V47, P21, DOI 10.1525/sp.2000.47.1.03x0278r PRECHEL H, 2000, BIG BUSINESS STATE H Cameron Maxwell A., 2000, MAKING NAFTA DEAL WA *DEP COMM, 2000, IND CONS PROGR MISS WOODALL P, 2000, PURCHASING POWER COR CRABTREE S, 2000, ROLL CALL NEWS 0424 Krueger AO, 1999, J ECON PERSPECT, V13, P105, DOI 10.1257/jep.13.4.105 Gulati R, 1999, AM J SOCIOL, V104, P1439, DOI 10.1086/210179 SALANT JD, 1999, ASS PRESS ONLIN 1219 LOVETT WA, 1999, US TRADE POLICY HIST Feenstra RC, 1998, J ECON PERSPECT, V12, P31 1998, DIRECTORY AM FIRMS O PREEG EH, 1998, HERE FREE TRADE ESSA Emirbayer M, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P281, DOI 10.1086/231209 Davis GF, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P1, DOI 10.1086/231170 Rodrik D, 1997, HAS GLOBALIZATION GO Long S.J., 1997, REGRESSION MODELS CA Milner Helen, 1997, INTERESTS I INFORM D Berry JM, 1997, INTEREST GROUP SOC NEIL TM, 1997, WASHINGTON POST 0917 Vogel DJ, 1996, CALIF MANAGE REV, V38, P146 Mizruchi MS, 1996, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V22, P271, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.22.1.271 MILNER H, 1996, ECON POLIT-OXFORD, V8, P145, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0343.1996.tb00126.x BECK N, 1995, AM POLIT SCI REV, V89, P634, DOI 10.2307/2082979 SU TT, 1995, SOC SCI QUART, V76, P20 Gereffi G, 1995, GLOBAL CHANGE REGION, P100 Gross James A., 1995, BROKEN PROMISES SUBV Krueger Anne O., 1995, AM TRADE POLICY TRAG MARTIN CJ, 1994, POLITY, V27, P49, DOI 10.2307/3235086 Wasserman S., 1994, SOCIAL NETWORK ANAL OHALLORAN S, 1994, POLITICS PROC AM TRA PETRACCA MP, 1994, REGULATORY ISSUES 19, P211 MURPHY KM, 1993, AM ECON REV, V83, P409 KNOKE D, 1993, ASA PRES S, P164 AKARD PJ, 1992, AM SOCIOL REV, V57, P597, DOI 10.2307/2095915 Yarbrough B. V., 1992, COOPERATION GOVERNAN Mizruchi M. S., 1992, STRUCTURE CORPORATE SALISBURY RH, 1992, INTERESTS I SUBSTANC BURRIS V, 1992, RES POLITICS SOC, V4, P111 MIZRUCHI MS, 1991, SOC SCI QUART, V72, P299 SORAUF FJ, 1991, INTEREST GROUP POLIT, P217 Przeworski Adam, 1990, STATE EC CAPITALISM Fligstein N., 1990, TRANSFORMATION CORPO Domhoff G. William, 1990, POWER ELITE STATE PO Gill Stephen, 1990, AM HEGEMONY TRILATER JESSOP B, 1990, STATE THEOR PUTTING BOIES JL, 1989, AM SOCIOL REV, V54, P821, DOI 10.2307/2117756 MIZRUCHI MS, 1989, AM J SOCIOL, V95, P401, DOI 10.1086/229274 MILNER HV, 1989, INT ORGAN, V43, P239 Rogowski Ronald, 1989, COMMERCE COALITIONS Vogel D., 1989, FLUCTUATING FORTUNES Sayrs L. W., 1989, POOLED TIME SERIES A CLAWSON D, 1989, AM J SOCIOL, V94, P749, DOI 10.1086/229067 BALDWIN RE, 1989, TRADE POLICY CHANGIN HAGGARD S, 1988, INT ORGAN, V42, P91 Milner H, 1988, RESISTING PROTECTION IKENBERRY GJ, 1988, STATE AM FOREIGN EC, P5 FRIEDEN J, 1988, STATE AM FOREIGN EC, P71 BURRIS V, 1987, AM SOCIOL REV, V52, P732, DOI 10.2307/2095832 MILNER H, 1987, INT ORGAN, V41, P639 BLOCK F, 1987, REVISING STATE THEOR FERGUSON T, 1986, RIGHT TURN Mintz B., 1985, POWER STRUCTURE AM B Useem M., 1984, INNER CIRCLE LARGE C Piore M., 1984, 2 IND DIVIDE POSSIBI MCKEOWN TJ, 1984, WORLD POLIT, V36, P215, DOI 10.2307/2010232 RUGGIE JG, 1982, INT ORGAN, V36, P379 Mizruchi M.S., 1982, AM CORPORATE NETWORK SKOCPOL T, 1982, POLIT SCI QUART, V97, P255, DOI 10.2307/2149478 LIPSON C, 1982, INT ORGAN, V36, P417 EFRON B, 1979, ANN STAT, V7, P1, DOI 10.1214/aos/1176344552 OSTROM CW, 1978, TIME SERIES ANAL REG Shoup Laurence H., 1977, IMPERIAL BRAIN TRUST Granovetter Mark, 1974, GETTING JOB STUDY CO BAUER R, 1972, AM BUSINESS PUBLIC P Domhoff G. W., 1967, WHO RULES AM Olson Mancur, 1965, LOGIC COLLECTIVE ACT Robert Dahl, 1961, WHO GOVERNS Mills C. W., 1956, POWER ELITE Hunter Floyd, 1953, COMMUNITY POWER STRU Polanyi K, 1944, GREAT TRANSFORMATION Schattschneider Elmer Eric., 1935, POLITICS PRESSURES T NR 111 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD MAR PY 2011 VL 116 IS 5 BP 1514 EP 1563 DI 10.1086/657524 PG 50 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 760IM UT WOS:000290318000004 ER PT J AU Fording, RC Soss, J Schram, SF AF Fording, Richard C. Soss, Joe Schram, Sanford F. TI Race and the Local Politics of Punishment in the New World of Welfare SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY LA English DT Article ID WHITE RACIAL-ATTITUDES; REFORM; POLICY; STATES; DEVOLUTION; DISCRETION; SANCTIONS; FRONTLINES; IDEOLOGY; GENDER AB To illuminate how race affects the usage of punitive tools in policy implementation settings, we analyze sanctions imposed for noncompliant client behavior under welfare reform. Drawing on a model of racial classification and policy choice, we test four hypotheses regarding client race, local context, and sanctioning. Based on longitudinal and cross-sectional multilevel analyses of individual-level administrative data, we find that race plays a significant role in shaping sanction implementation. Its effects, however, are highly contingent on client characteristics, local political contexts, and the degree to which state governments devolve policy control to local officials. C1 [Fording, Richard C.] Univ Kentucky, Dept Polit Sci, Ctr Poverty Res, Lexington, KY 40506 USA. [Soss, Joe] Univ Minnesota, Study Publ Serv, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA. [Schram, Sanford F.] Bryn Mawr Coll, Sch Social Work & Social Res, Bryn Mawr, PA 19010 USA. RP Fording, RC (reprint author), Univ Kentucky, Dept Polit Sci, Ctr Poverty Res, Lexington, KY 40506 USA EM rford@uky.edu CR Collins J. L, 2010, BOTH HANDS TIED WELF Schram SE, 2009, AM SOCIOL REV, V74, P398 RIDZI F, 2009, SELLING WELFARE REFO VALENTINO NA, 2009, PUNISHING POOR NEOLI Dyck JJ, 2008, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V72, P589, DOI 10.1093/poq/nfn053 Soss J, 2008, AM J POLIT SCI, V52, P536, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-5907.2008.00328.x Lens V, 2008, SOC SERV REV, V82, P197, DOI 10.1086/589706 Quillian L, 2008, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V71, P6 JordanZachery JS, 2008, ROUT STUD N AM POLIT, P1 Krinsky J, 2007, URBAN AFF REV, V42, P771, DOI 10.1177/1078087407299172 Fording RC, 2007, SOC SERV REV, V81, P285, DOI 10.1086/517974 Hancock A. M., 2007, PERSPECTIVES POLITIC, V5, P63 Strolovitch Dara, 2007, AFFIRMATIVE ADVOCACY Brown W, 2006, POLIT THEORY, V34, P690, DOI 10.1177/0090591706293016 Lens V, 2006, SOC SCI QUART, V87, P573, DOI 10.1111/j.1540-6237.2006.00397.x Eberhardt JL, 2006, PSYCHOL SCI, V17, P383, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2006.01716.x Wu CF, 2006, SOC WORK RES, V30, P33 SCHRAM Sanford, 2006, WELFARE DISCIPLINE D MEYERS M, 2006, REV RES TANF SANCTIO Somers MR, 2005, AM SOCIOL REV, V70, P260 McCall L, 2005, SIGNS, V30, P1771, DOI 10.1086/426800 Harvey David, 2005, BRIEF HIST NEOLIBERA Katznelson Ira, 2005, AFFIRMATIVE ACTION W Collins P, 2005, BLACK SEXUAL POLITIC Mittelstadt J., 2005, WELFARE WORKFARE UNI Mead L. M., 2005, WELFARE REFORM POLIT, P172 SCHRAM SF, 2005, PERSPECTIVES POLITIC, V3, P253 Fox C, 2004, AM J SOCIOL, V110, P580, DOI 10.1086/422587 Haney L, 2004, SOC POLIT, V11, P333, DOI 10.1093/sp/jxh040 Hasenfeld Y, 2004, SOC SERV REV, V78, P304, DOI 10.1086/382771 Fellowes MC, 2004, AM J POLIT SCI, V48, P362, DOI 10.1111/j.0092-5853.2004.00075.x Keiser LR, 2004, AM J POLIT SCI, V48, P314, DOI 10.2307/1519885 Mead Lawrence M, 2004, GOVT MATTERS WELFARE RIDZI F, 2004, J SOCIOLOGY SOCIAL W, V31, P27 HANCOCK AM, 2004, POLITICS DISGUST Gainsborough JF, 2003, POLICY STUD J, V31, P603, DOI 10.1111/1541-0072.00045 Korteweg AC, 2003, THEOR SOC, V32, P445, DOI 10.1023/A:1025525509540 Pager D, 2003, AM J SOCIOL, V108, P937, DOI 10.1086/374403 Maynard-Moody S., 2003, COPS TEACHERS COUNSE Hays S, 2003, FLAT BROKE CHILDREN Brown Wendy, 2003, THEORY EVENT, V7 Zimring Franklin, 2003, CONTRADICTIONS AM CA PAVETTI L, 2003, REV SANCTION POLICIE FORDING RC, 2003, RACE POLITICS WELFAR GOODEN ST, 2003, RACE POLITICS WELFAR, P254 Peck J, 2002, ANTIPODE, V34, P380, DOI 10.1111/1467-8330.00247 Federico CM, 2002, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V66, P145, DOI 10.1086/339848 Valentino NA, 2002, AM POLIT SCI REV, V96, P75 Jacobs D, 2002, AM SOCIOL REV, V67, P109, DOI 10.2307/3088936 Kettl D, 2002, TRANSFORMATION GOVER KALIL A, 2002, SOC SERV REV, V76, P643 Mink Gwendolyn, 2002, WELFARES END Domke D, 2001, COMMUN RES, V28, P772, DOI 10.1177/009365001028006003 Soss J, 2001, AM J POLIT SCI, V45, P378, DOI 10.2307/2669347 Richards Z, 2001, PERS SOC PSYCHOL REV, V5, P52, DOI 10.1207/S15327957PSPR0501_4 Mendelberg Tali, 2001, RACE CARD CAMPAIGN S Neubeck Kenneth J., 2001, WELFARE RACISM PLAYI MANCUSO D, 2001, EXAMINING CIRCUMSTAN BOTSKO C, 2001, RECENT CHANGES FLORI Oliver JE, 2000, AM J POLIT SCI, V44, P574, DOI 10.2307/2669265 Schram S. F, 2000, SOCIAL TEXT, V18, P81, DOI 10.1215/01642472-18-1_62-81 Maynard-Moody S., 2000, J PUBL ADM RES THEOR, V10, P329 Barber JS, 2000, SOCIOL METHODOL, V30, P201 Sears D. O., 2000, RACIALIZED POLITICS WESTRA K, 2000, ARIZONA CASH ASSISTA KORALEK R, 2000, S CAROLINA FAMILY IN Gilens Martin, 1999, WHY AM HATE WELFARE Trattner W., 1999, POOR LAW WELFARE STA MILLER WE, 1999, POLIT ANAL, V8, P119 RECTOR RE, 1999, 9904 HER FDN Beck N, 1998, AM J POLIT SCI, V42, P1260, DOI 10.2307/2991857 Johnson MK, 1998, SOC PSYCHOL QUART, V61, P247, DOI 10.2307/2787111 Mead LM, 1998, PUBLIC INTEREST, P97 Hero Rodney E., 1998, FACES INEQUALITY SOC Lieberman Robert C., 1998, SHIFTING COLOR LINE Mettler Suzanne, 1998, DIVIDING CITIZENS GE PAVETTI LA, 1998, DESCRIPTION ASSESSME STAROBIN P, 1998, NATL J, V30, P678 Adkisson RV, 1998, SOC SCI J, V35, P303, DOI 10.1016/S0362-3319(98)90001-5 Soule SA, 1997, AM J SOCIOL, V103, P733, DOI 10.1086/231254 Peffley M, 1997, AM J POLIT SCI, V41, P30, DOI 10.2307/2111708 Schneider A., 1997, POLICY DESIGN DEMOCR Steeh Charlotte, 1997, RACIAL ATTITUDES AM Mead L, 1997, NEW PATERNALISM SUPE Katz Michael B., 1996, SHADOW POORHOUSE SOC NATHAN RP, 1996, ROCKEFELLER I B 1996, P5 SCHRAM S, 1995, WORDS WELFARE POVERT BORJAS GJ, 1994, J ECONOMETRICS, V64, P165, DOI 10.1016/0304-4076(94)90062-0 GLASER JM, 1994, J POLIT, V56, P21, DOI 10.2307/2132344 Gordon Linda, 1994, PITIED NOT ENTITLED Quadagno Jill, 1994, COLOR WELFARE RACISM SCHNEIDER A, 1993, AM POLIT SCI REV, V87, P334, DOI 10.2307/2939044 MEIER KJ, 1993, POLITICS BUREAUCRACY Barrett Edith, 1992, SUPPORT AM WELFARE S DEVINE PG, 1991, PERS SOC PSYCHOL B, V17, P44, DOI 10.1177/0146167291171007 Nelson Barbara, 1990, WOMEN STATE WELFARE ABRAMOVITZ M, 1988, REGULATING LIVES WOM Hasenfeld Y., 1987, SOC SERV REV, V61, P469 KEECH WR, 1981, IMPACT NEGRO VOTING PROTTAS JM, 1979, PEOPLE PROC STREET L PIVEN FF, 1971, REGULATING POOR PUBL Key V. O., 1949, SO POLITICS STATE NA Lasswell Harold D., 1936, POLITICS WHO GETS WH SOSS J, J PUBLIC AD IN PRESS NR 104 TC 0 Z9 0 PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS PI CHICAGO PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA SN 0002-9602 J9 AM J SOCIOL JI Am. J. Sociol. PD MAR PY 2011 VL 116 IS 5 BP 1610 EP 1657 DI 10.1086/657525 PG 48 WC Sociology SC Sociology GA 760IM UT WOS:000290318000006 ER PT J AU Coverdill, JE Lopez, CA Petrie, MA AF Coverdill, James E. Lopez, Carlos A. Petrie, Michelle A. TI Race, Ethnicity and the Quality of Life in America, 1972-2008 SO SOCIAL FORCES LA English DT Article ID UNITED-STATES; CONTINUING SIGNIFICANCE; MEXICAN-AMERICANS; HAPPINESS; DETERMINANTS; PROGRESS AB We extend research on black-white gaps in the subjective quality of life by exploring recent General Social Survey data, focusing attention on Latinos, and probing the value of partial proportional odds models for ordinal quality-of-life measures. Results indicate a declining but discernable black-white gap for four measures-marital happiness, overall happiness, health status and trust-and the persistence of a gap for another-satisfaction with finances. Although Latinos as a whole have a lower quality of life than non-Latinos, significant differences between Mexican-origin Latinos and those from other countries emerge for only two quality-of-life measures, overall happiness and financial satisfaction. The partial proportional odds models overcome technical problems common to the analysis of ordinal dependent variables and establish both the magnitude and location of inequalities. C1 [Coverdill, James E.] Univ Georgia, Dept Sociol, Athens, GA 30602 USA. [Lopez, Carlos A.] Chemeketa Community Coll, Salem, OR USA. [Petrie, Michelle A.] Univ S Carolina, Aiken, SC USA. RP Coverdill, JE (reprint author), Univ Georgia, Dept Sociol, 214B Baldwin Hall, Athens, GA 30602 USA EM jimcov@uga.edu CR Davis JamesAllan, 2009, GEN SOCIAL SURVEYS 1 Lopez SJ, 2009, OXFORD HDB POSITIVE *PEW RES CTR, 2009, MEX IMM US 2008 Yang Y, 2008, AM SOCIOL REV, V73, P204 Eid M., 2008, SCI SUBJECTIVE WELL, P44 Ring L, 2007, SOC INDIC RES, V82, P443, DOI 10.1007/s11205-006-9041-y U.S. Census Bureau, 2007, AM COMM HISP 2004 United States Census Bureau, 2007, INC POV HLTH INS COV *PEW RES CTR, 2007, OPT BLACK PROGR DECL *PEW RES CTR, 2007, 2007 NAT SURV LAT IL Sirgy MJ, 2006, SOC INDIC RES, V76, P343, DOI 10.1007/s11205-005-2877-8 Long J. S., 2006, REGRESSION MODELS CA Williams R, 2006, STATA J, V6, P58 OOCONNELL AA, 2006, LOGISTIC REGRESSION Seligman MEP, 2005, AM PSYCHOL, V60, P410, DOI 10.1037/0003-066X.60.5.410 BOWLING A, 2005, AGING WELL Hagan JM, 2004, WORK OCCUPATION, V31, P407, DOI 10.1177/0730888404268921 Ferrer-i-Carbonell A, 2004, ECON J, V114, P641, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0297.2004.00235.x